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Abstract. In the boreal forest of eastern Canada, winter temperatures are projected to increase substantially by 2100. This region is also expected to receive less solid precipitation, resulting in a reduction in snow cover thickness and duration. These changes are likely to affect hydrological processes such as snowmelt, the soil thermal regime, and snow metamorphism. The exact impact of future changes is difficult to pinpoint in the boreal forest, due to its complex structure and the fact that snow dynamics under the canopy are very different from those in the gaps. In this study, we assess the influence of a low-snow and warm winter on snowmelt dynamics, soil freezing, snowpack properties, and spring streamflow in a humid and discontinuous boreal catchment of eastern Canada (47.29° N, 71.17° W; ≈ 850 m a.m.s.l.) based on observations and SNOWPACK simulations. We monitored the soil and snow thermal regimes and sampled physical properties of the snowpack under the canopy and in two forest gaps during an exceptionally low-snow and warm winter, projected to occur more frequently in the future, and during a winter with conditions close to normal. We observe that snowmelt was earlier but slower, top soil layers were cooler, and gradient metamorphism was enhanced during the low-snow and warm winter. However, we observe that snowmelt duration increased in forest gaps, that soil freezing was enhanced only under the canopy, and that snow permeability increased more strongly under the canopy than in either gap. Our results highlight that snow accumulation and melt dynamics are controlled by meteorological conditions, soil freezing is controlled by forest structure, and snow properties are controlled by both weather forcing and canopy discontinuity. Overall, observations and simulations suggest that the exceptionally low spring streamflow in the winter of 2020–2120 was mainly driven by low snow accumulation, slow snowmelt, and low precipitation in April and May rather than enhanced percolation through the snowpack and soil freezing.
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At high latitudes, lake-atmosphere interactions are disrupted for several months of the year by the presence of an ice cover. By isolating the water column from the atmosphere, ice, typically topped by snow, drastically alters albedo, surface roughness, and heat exchanges relative to the open water period, with major climatic, ecological, and hydrological implications. Lake models used to simulate the appearance and disappearance of the ice cover have rarely been validated with detailed in situ observations of snow and ice. In this study, we investigate the ability of the physically-based 1D Canadian Small Lake Model (CSLM) to simulate the freeze-up, ice-cover growth, and breakup of a small boreal lake. The model, driven offline by local weather observations, is run on Lake Piché, 0.15 km 2 and 4 m deep (47.32°N; 71.15°W) from 25 October 2019 to 20 July 2021, and compared to observations of the temperature profile and ice and snow cover properties. Our results show that the CSLM is able to reproduce the total ice thickness (average error of 15 cm) but not the ice type-specific thickness, underestimating clear ice and overestimating snow ice. CSLM manages to reproduce snow depth (errors less than 10 cm). However, it has an average cold bias of 2°C and an underestimation of average snow density of 34 kg m −3 . Observed and model freeze-up and break-up dates are very similar, as the model is able to predict the longevity of the ice cover to within 2 weeks. CSLM successfully reproduces seasonal stratification, the mixed layer depth, and surface water temperatures, while it shows discrepancies in simulating bottom waters especially during the open water period.