Abstract

Abstract. The St. Lawrence Estuary connects the Great Lakes with the Atlantic Ocean. The accepted view, based on summer conditions, is that the estuary's surface layer receives its nutrient supply from vertical mixing processes. This mixing is caused by the estuarine circulation and tides interacting with the topography at the head of the Laurentian Channel. During winter when ice forms, historical process-based studies have been limited in scope. Winter monitoring has been typically confined to vertical profiles of salinity and temperature as well as near-surface water samples collected from a helicopter for nutrient analysis. In 2018, however, the Canadian Coast Guard approved a science team to sample in tandem with its ice-breaking and ship escorting operations. This opportunistic sampling provided the first winter turbulence observations, which covered the largest spatial extent ever measured during any season within the St. Lawrence Estuary and the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The nitrate enrichment from tidal mixing resulted in an upward nitrate flux of about 30 nmol m−2 s−1, comparable to summer values obtained at the same tidal phase. Further downstream, deep nutrient-rich water from the gulf was mixed into the subsurface nutrient-poor layer at a rate more than an order of magnitude smaller than at the head. These fluxes were compared to the nutrient load of the upstream St. Lawrence River. Contrary to previous assumptions, fluvial nitrate inputs are the most significant source of nitrate in the estuary. Nitrate loads from vertical mixing processes would only exceed those from fluvial sources at the end of summer when fluvial inputs reach their annual minimum.

Highlights

  • Oceans, coastal seas, and estuaries at high latitudes are relatively under-sampled due to their isolation and inhospitable weather

  • We were unsure what to expect from our winter mixing measurements, but the low nutrient uptake through photosynthesis provided a better representation of the nutrient transport mechanisms than possible from summer observations

  • We attribute the relatively high salinities around the head of the Laurentian Channel (HLC) to tidal upwelling and mixing that characterize this region throughout the year (Ingram, 1983; Galbraith, 2006; Cyr et al, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Coastal seas, and estuaries at high latitudes are relatively under-sampled due to their isolation and inhospitable weather. Ambitious multidisciplinary campaigns have been undertaken in the Canadian Arctic aboard the icebreaker CCGS Amundsen, such as CASES (Fortier et al, 2008), CFL (Barber et al, 2010), and Arctic SOLAS (Papakyriakou and Stern, 2011–2012), but few scientific campaigns have been carried out in the St. Lawrence Estuary and the Gulf of St. Lawrence during the sea-ice season (Fig. 1). We present winter measurements collected alongside the coast guard’s normal icebreaker operations. We were unsure what to expect from our winter mixing measurements, but the low nutrient uptake through photosynthesis provided a better representation of the nutrient transport mechanisms than possible from summer observations

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