Ronald E. Stewart’s research while affiliated with University of Northern British Columbia and other places

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Publications (110)


Meteorologically-Related Factors Leading to the 2008, 2018, and 2019 Major Spring Floods in the Transboundary Saint John River (Wolastoq) Basin
  • Article

January 2025

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11 Reads

Lisa J. Rickard

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Ronald E. Stewart

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The flood-prone Saint John River (SJR, Wolastoq), which lies within a drainage basin of 55,110 km ² , flows a length of 673 km from its source in northern Maine, United States to its mouth in southern New Brunswick, Canada. Major industries in the basin include forestry, agriculture, and hydroelectric power. During the 1991–2020 reference period, the SJR basin (SJRB) experienced major spring flood events in 2008, 2018, and 2019. As part of the Saint John River Experiment on Cold Season Storms, the objective of this research is to characterize and contrast these three major spring floods events. Given the floods all occurred during spring, the hypothesis being tested is that rapid snowmelt alone is the dominant driver of flooding in the SJR basin (SJRB). There were commonalities and differences regarding the contributing factors of the three flood years. When averaged across the upper basin, they showed consistency in terms of positive winter and spring total precipitation anomalies, positive snow water equivalent anomalies, and steep increases in April cumulative runoff. Rain-on-snow events were a prominent feature of all three flood years. However, differences between flood years were also evident, including inconsistencies with respect to ice jams and high tides. Certain factors were present in only one or two of the three flood years, including positive total precipitation anomalies in spring, positive heavy liquid precipitation anomalies in spring, positive heavy solid precipitation anomalies in winter, and positive temperature anomalies in spring. The dominant factor contributing to peak water levels was rapid snowmelt.



Top: the upper Saint John River basin (shaded red), straddling the borders of Quebec (QC), Maine (ME, United States), and New Brunswick (NB) is a sub-basin of the Saint John River basin (red line). The Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) and US National Weather Service (NWS) weather stations, SAJESS-supplied CoCoRaHS stations including where temperature–RH sensors were also co-located (black circles), the precipitation phase observatory/Fixed Station (pink triangle), and the UQAM MUST Trailer (green triangle) are shown. Bottom: aerial photographs of the two main SAJESS sites showing the locations of the Fixed Station, MUST Trailer, and ECCC station. © Microsoft product screenshots reprinted with permission from © Microsoft Corporation.
The precipitation phase observatory instrumentation, image taken looking north. From left-to-right: the K63 Hotplate, a laser-optical disdrometer installed upon the meteorological tripod, and the micro rain radar. This station was also to be known as the “Fixed Station”. Picture taken 1 December 2020.
Instruments and sensors co-located with the Mobile Urban Weather Station (MUST) Trailer. (a) The MUST Trailer with extended 10 m mast, anemometer (not included in the dataset), and K63 Hotplate; (b) the meteorological tripod; (c) the multi-angle snow camera (MASC) with a top-down view of the internal components and three high-speed cameras; and (d) the MASC, MRR-Pro, and meteorological tripod lined along the access road to the water treatment lagoon. Pictures taken 3 March 2021.
The Fixed Station flux tripod. An open-path eddy-covariance system consisting of an infrared gas analyzer and sonic anemometer (IRGASON), soil temperature probes, a soil moisture sensor, a net radiometer, an infrared radiometer, and temperature–RH sensors. This tripod was installed for the melt period from 5 March to 30 April 2021. Picture taken 5 March 2021.
SAJESS Fixed Station and ECCC temperature data. Comparison of 1 min temperature data (63 149 recordings) from the Fixed Station temperature probe and the mean of the three ECCC temperature thermistor readings. The Fixed Station HMP155 has a -2.32 ∘C bias due to the method of wiring and data recording. The solid black line represents a 1 : 1 relationship (i.e., zero bias).

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Atmospheric and surface observations during the Saint John River Experiment on Cold Season Storms (SAJESS)
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  • Full-text available

December 2023

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61 Reads

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1 Citation

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The amount and the phase of cold-season precipitation accumulating in the upper Saint John River (SJR) basin are critical factors in determining spring runoff, ice jams, and flooding. To study the impact of winter and spring storms on the snowpack in the upper SJR basin, the Saint John River Experiment on Cold Season Storms (SAJESS) was conducted during winter–spring 2020–2021. Here, we provide an overview of the SAJESS study area, field campaign, and data collected. The upper SJR basin represents 41 % of the entire SJR watershed and encompasses parts of the US state of Maine and the Canadian provinces of Quebec and New Brunswick. In early December 2020, meteorological instruments were co-located with an Environment and Climate Change Canada station near Edmundston, New Brunswick. This included a separate weather station for measuring standard meteorological variables, an optical disdrometer, and a micro rain radar. This instrumentation was augmented during an intensive observation period that also included upper-air soundings, surface weather observations, a multi-angle snowflake camera, and macrophotography of solid hydrometeors throughout March and April 2021. During the study, the region experienced a lower-than-average snowpack that peaked at ∼ 65 cm, with a total of 287 mm of precipitation (liquid-equivalent) falling between December 2020 and April 2021, a 21 % lower amount of precipitation than the climatological normal. Observers were present for 13 storms during which they conducted 183 h of precipitation observations and took more than 4000 images of hydrometeors. The inclusion of local volunteers and schools provided an additional 1700 measurements of precipitation amounts across the area. The resulting datasets are publicly available from the Federated Research Data Repository at 10.20383/103.0591 (Thompson et al., 2023). We also include a synopsis of the data management plan and a brief assessment of the rewards and challenges of conducting the field campaign and utilizing community volunteers for citizen science.

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Atmospheric and surface observations during the Saint John River Experiment on Cold Season Storms (SAJESS)

March 2023

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96 Reads

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2 Citations

The amount and phase of cold season precipitation accumulating in the upper Saint John River basin are critical factors in determining spring runoff, ice-jams, and flooding in downstream communities. To study the impact of winter and spring storms on the snowpack in the upper Saint John River (SJR) basin, the Saint John River Experiment on Cold Season Storms (SAJESS) utilized meteorological instrumentation, upper air soundings, human observations, and hydrometeor macrophotography during winter/spring 2020–21. Here, we provide an overview of the SAJESS study area, field campaign, and existing data networks surrounding the upper SJR basin. Initially, meteorological instrumentation was co-located with an Environment and Climate Change Canada station near Edmundston, New Brunswick, in early December 2020. This was followed by an intensive observation period that involved manual observations, upper-air soundings, a multi-angle snowflake camera, macrophotography of solid hydrometeors, and advanced automated instrumentation throughout March and April 2021. The resulting datasets include optical disdrometer size and velocity distributions of hydrometeors, micro rain radar output, near-surface meteorological observations, and wind speed, temperature, pressure and precipitation amounts from a K63 Hotplate precipitation gauge, the first one operating in Canada. These data are publicly available from the Federated Research Data Repository at https://doi.org/10.20383/103.0591 (Thompson et al., 2022). We also include a synopsis of the data management plan and data processing, and a brief assessment of the rewards and challenges of utilizing community volunteers for hydro-meteorological citizen science.


Adhering Solid Precipitation in the Current and Pseudo-Global Warming Future Climate over the Canadian Provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan

February 2023

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94 Reads

Solid precipitation falling near 0 °C, mainly snow, can adhere to surface features and produce major impacts. This study is concerned with characterizing this precipitation over the Canadian Prairie provinces of Manitoba and Saskatchewan in the current (2000–2013) and pseudo-global warming future climate, with an average 5.9 °C temperature increase, through the use of high resolution (4 km) model simulations. On average, simulations in the current climate suggest that this precipitation occurs within 11 events per year, lasting 33.6 h in total and producing 27.5 mm melted equivalent, but there are wide spatial variations that are partly due to enhancements arising from its relatively low terrain. Within the warmer climate, average values generally increase, and spatial patterns shift somewhat. This precipitation consists of four categories covering its occurrence just below and just above a wet-bulb temperature of 0 °C, and with or without liquid precipitation. It generally peaks in March or April, as well as in October, and these peaks move towards mid-winter by approximately one month within the warmer climate. Storms producing this precipitation generally produce winds with a northerly component during or shortly after the precipitation; these winds contribute to further damage. Overall, this study has determined the features of and expected changes to adhering precipitation across this region.


Storms and Precipitation Across the Continental Divide Experiment (SPADE)

September 2022

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91 Reads

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5 Citations

The Canadian Rockies are a triple-continental divide, whose high mountains are drained by major snow-fed and rain-fed rivers flowing to the Pacific, Atlantic and Arctic Oceans. The objective of the April-June 2019 Storms and Precipitation Across the continental Divide Experiment (SPADE) was to determine the atmospheric processes producing precipitation on the eastern and western sides of the Canadian Rockies during springtime, a period when upslope events of variable phase dominate precipitation on the eastern slopes. To do so, three observing sites across the divide were instrumented with advanced meteorological sensors. During the 13 observed events, the western side recorded only 25% of the eastern side’s precipitation accumulation, rainfall occurred rather than snowfall, and skies were mainly clear. Moisture sources and amounts varied markedly between events. An atmospheric river landfall in California led to moisture flowing persistently northward and producing the longest duration of precipitation on both sides of the divide. Moisture from the continental interior always produced precipitation on the eastern side but only in specific conditions on the western side. Mainly slow-falling ice crystals, sometimes rimed, formed at higher elevations on the eastern side (> 3 km MSL), were lifted, and subsequently drifted westward over the divide during non-convective storms to produce rain at the surface on the western side. Overall, precipitation generally crossed the divide in the Canadian Rockies during specific spring-storm atmospheric conditions although amounts at the surface varied with elevation, condensate type, and local and large-scale flow fields.


The Severe Multi-Day October 2019 Snow Storm Over Southern Manitoba, Canada

May 2022

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88 Reads

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4 Citations

Atmosphere-ocean

A devastating storm struck southern Manitoba, Canada on 10–13 October 2019, producing a large region of mainly sticky and wet snow. Accumulations reached 75 cm, wind gusts exceeded 100 km h⁻¹, and surface temperature (T) remained near 0°C (−1°C ≤ T ≤ 1°C) for up to 88 h. It produced the largest October snowfall and was the earliest to produce at least 20 cm since 1872 in Winnipeg. These factors led to unparalleled damage and power restoration challenges for Manitoba Hydro and, with leaves still largely on vegetation, the most damaging storm to Winnipeg’s trees ever recorded. The storm’s track was uncommon, and produced elevated convection related to buoyancy-driven instability and conditional symmetric instability (CSI), with a moist absolutely unstable layer (MAUL) near 500 hPa. Instabilities were released via lift through lower-tropospheric warm advection and frontogenesis, differential cyclonic vorticity advection, and jet streak dynamics. Precipitation bands, elevated convection, and lake effect snow bands enhanced local snowfall. Snow adhering to structures was not always wet but, when present, it sometimes occurred because of incomplete freezing of particles partially melted aloft in a near-surface (<100 m deep) inversion. Although other storms over the historical record have produced a similar combination of severe precipitation, temperature and wind conditions, none have done this for such a long period.


Chemical characteristics of freezing rain observed at Mount Heng in southern China

May 2022

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75 Reads

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2 Citations

Atmospheric Environment

Freezing rain usually occurs when snow falls into an above-freezing layer aloft where it melts before reaching the sub-freezing surface. Although the occurrence of freezing rain is uncommon, it can produce extremely costly impacts. To date, field chemical observations of supercooled drops that form freezing rain are lacking. In this study, we collected 101 precipitation (freezing rain/rain/snow) samples on Mt. Heng in southern China for 7 years in the winters between 2015 and 2021. The freezing rain was mostly acidic with pH values lower than 5. Acidity, contributed from NO3⁻ and SO4²⁻, was neutralized by NH4⁺ and Ca²⁺, indicating the additional contribution from organic acids. The major ions of freezing rain were NH4⁺, SO4²⁻, Ca²⁺ and NO3⁻, with concentrations of 135.7, 72.5, 86.3 and 61.8 μeq L⁻¹, respectively. In general, the total ionic concentrations of freezing rain were, in comparison with mountain-based observations elsewhere, lower than those in cloud water but higher than those in rain. The higher concentrations of major ions would depress the freezing point and act to reduce the likelihood of freezing with effects increasing with concentration. This process would be countered by the presence of ice nuclei that is acting to freeze supercooled drops. These opposing processes complicate the understanding of the onset of freezing and consequently the occurrence of freezing rain. This study highlighted that additional model simulation and laboratory experiment are needed to validate relationships between air pollution and freezing rain.


Citations (86)


... Parameters from ERA5 include hourly horizontal components of the wind (u and v), specific humidity, atmospheric pressure, total precipitation, and moisture divergence. Further details regarding ERA5 and ERA5-Land can be obtained from other recent studies such as Richards-Thomas et al. [22], Hou et al. [38], and Sobral and Déry [39]. ...

Reference:

Moisture transport to British Columbia’s upper Nechako Watershed associated with three atmospheric rivers
Climatological Context of the Mid-November 2021 Floods in the Province of British Columbia, Canada
  • Citing Article
  • June 2024

Weather and Climate Extremes

... The atmospheric processes that occur in the upper SJRB influence the magnitude and timing of the spring freshet throughout the basin, but especially in the lower basin (Buttle et al. 2016; Thompson et al. 2023). Although some research has been conducted on SJRB floods, there is a gap in terms of comparing meteorological factors leading to major events, as many of these previous studies have focused on ice jam flooding (e.g., Beltaos 1999;Beltaos et al. 2003;Beltaos and Prowse 2001). ...

Atmospheric and surface observations during the Saint John River Experiment on Cold Season Storms (SAJESS)

... The region encompasses complex topography including glacierized mountains, vast plateaus, deep valleys, and the Pacific coastal temperate rainforest. The area is bounded on the west by the northeastern Pacific Ocean, which moderates the regional climate, while to the east, the Interior Plateau experiences a more continental climate (Cardinal et al., 2023;Demarchi, 2011;Sharma & Déry, 2020b). Northern BC has experienced amplified climate change with increases of up to 2°C in air temperatures since 1950 with concomitant changes in precipitation patterns and terrestrial hydrology (Sanderson et al., 2015). ...

Climatology of and Factors Contributing to Occurrences of Near-0°C Temperatures and Associated Precipitation At and Near Terrace, British Columbia, Canada
  • Citing Article
  • November 2023

Atmosphere-ocean

... The SAJESS dataset (including the sample subset of data) is available from the Federated Research Data Repository (FRDR) and can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.20383/103.0591 (Thompson et al., 2023) and is included in the Global Water Futures FRDR collection. CoCoRaHS data are available from https://cocorahs.org/Canada.aspx ...

Atmospheric and surface observations during the Saint John River Experiment on Cold Season Storms (SAJESS)

... PWL station was one of SPADE's study sites (Thériault et al., 2021(Thériault et al., , 2022. SPADE took place between 24 April and 26 June 2019 and used the MRR-2 and Parsivel 2 data, except that the Parsivel 2 was in a different location ∼200 m away from its original site displayed in Figure 2 (see Figure 2d in Thériault et al. (2021)). ...

Storms and Precipitation Across the Continental Divide Experiment (SPADE)
  • Citing Article
  • September 2022

... The simulated L-moments and the probability of zero match the corresponding observed properties at all tested time scales, showing almost identical scaling. The ability of the stochastic generation method to preserve the statistical properties of SD across multiple larger time scales is important for water resources management (e.g., Hanesiak et al., 2022), as SD typically accumulates over multi-day events. ...

The Severe Multi-Day October 2019 Snow Storm Over Southern Manitoba, Canada
  • Citing Article
  • May 2022

Atmosphere-ocean

... An ice storm is a meteorological phenomenon characterized by a drop of freezing liquid precipitation, which poses significant hazards in cold regions (Klima and Morgan 2015; American Meteorological Society 2020). Usually, before snow reaches the ground, it turns into supercooled droplets above freezing layers (Li et al. 2022b). These events occur largely in high latitude regions, like Eastern North America, central and western Canada (Changnon 2003;McCray et al. 2022McCray et al. , 2023Thériault et al. 2022) and Russia and Fennoscandia (Groisman et al. 2016(Groisman et al. , 2017. ...

Chemical characteristics of freezing rain observed at Mount Heng in southern China
  • Citing Article
  • May 2022

Atmospheric Environment

... This is simulated mainly over the plain area where ice droplet melting occurred under warmer surface temperatures, while in the higher mountain areas, ice droplets did not melt as much because surface temperatures were under 0°C, often leading to an increased or unchanged total snowfall in some areas. It should be noted that near-surface temperature inversion, that can lead to freezing precipitation, is relatively uncommon in Japan compared to regions such as in the North American continent (e.g., Tropea & Stewart, 2021). However, in the warmer climate, the possibility of freezing precipitation events in Japan may potentially increase under warmer atmospheric conditions and warrants itself for more detailed future studies. ...

Assessing Past and future Hazardous freezing Rain and wet snow Events in Manitoba, Canada Using a pseudo-global warming approach
  • Citing Article
  • April 2021

Atmospheric Research

... For example, large parts of Canmore were affected by a flood event in 2013 [26]. More recently, western Canada has experienced some of the worst fire seasons ever recorded, bringing home how vulnerable the community is to drought-related impacts [27]. Amidst these tangible impacts, Canmore exemplifies local leadership as the town declared a state of climate emergency in 2019 and has established a climate action plan [28]. ...

Summary and synthesis of Changing Cold Regions Network (CCRN) research in the interior of western Canada – Part 2: Future change in cryosphere, vegetation, and hydrology

... Multi-year dry episodes intermittently affected the Canadian Prairies, notably in 1890, 1910, 1930, 1950, 1960, 1980, and 1999to 2005(Bonsal and Regier 2007Chipanshi et al. 2006). Future projections suggest that drought intensity and duration will increase, driven by prevailing climate conditions and their intrinsic characteristics (Bonsal et al. 2020). ...

Historical and Projected Changes to the Stages and Other Characteristics of Severe Canadian Prairie Droughts