We report the results of a multifactor
global change experiment in a desert grassland, located
at the Sevilleta LTER in central New Mexico. Starting the summer of 2006, we imposed
nighttime warming and N addition treatments. In 2007 we will add an El Niño treatment
of winter water addition. Here we report the results of the first growing
season with warming and N addition. We used a novel technique to impose
nighttime warming, in which aluminum fabric is unrolled over the vegetation
each night and rolled up each morning. This fabric reflects the longwave radiation emitted from the ground, which would
otherwise be lost to space, back onto the vegetation and increases daily
minimum temperatures by 1.5 – 2 °C. We applied N at a rate of 1 g/m2
in July and measured plant species cover in September. Warming and N addition
both increased total cover. Control plots had 32% cover, N addition plots had
39% cover, warmed plots had 40% cover, and plots with both warming and N
addition had 41% cover. Subshrubs increased from 9 to
20% cover comparing control and warmed plots. NO3 supply, as
measured with Plant Root Simulator probes, increased by 28% in the N addition
plots. NO3 supply in warmed plots was 12% higher than in control
plots, but this difference was not statistically significant. Our results
demonstrate rapid plant community responses to nighttime warming in a desert grassland.