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The Desert Rainfall And Climate There are three types of deserts: tropical, temperate, and polar. Tropical deserts are generally hot and dry and relatively barren like Saudi Arabia. Temperate deserts are hot in the summer and cold in the winter and have the most rainfall of any type of desert. These are found in places like Reno, Nevada and have sparse vegetation like cactuses. Polar, or cold deserts are found in places like northwestern China and have low precipitation. The semiarid zones between deserts and grasslands are called semideserts and have more vegetation than others. Deserts Plants Desert plants adapt to the hot, dry climate of a desert in many ways. The mesquite and creosote for example drop their leaves and survive in a dormant state during prolonged droughts. Saguaro have no leaves to limit evaporation and they store water in their fleshy tissue as well as only opening up to absorb carbon dioxide at night to preserve their water as much as possible. Plants like the prickly pear cactus use deep roots to reach groundwater. -Mesquite -Saguaro -Prickly Pear Cactus (pictured –>) -Agave -Yucca Desert Animals Some small animals like the kangaroo rat survive desert heat by burrowing in cool, rocky crevices, others have physically adapted. Insects and lizards like the collared lizard have thick outer coverings to retain moisture. Insects like the Arabian oryxes find water in dew rather than depending on bodies of water. -Kangaroo Rat (pictured –>) -Diamondback Rattlesnake -Jack Rabbit -Collared Lizard -Arabian Oryx Limiting Factors The primary abiotic factors that limit life in the desert are the harsh climate which includes both extremely high and low temperatures as well as minimal rainfall and often long droughts. Because there is so little moisture in the soil the temperatures at night and day are drastically different because there is no water to regulate the change. These problems lead to limiting biotic factors for many organisms such as a lack of food due to the sparse vegetation. All of these factors combine lead to a relatively low carrying capacity which means that fewer organisms of any given species can survive in the desert than in more lush biomes. Species Interaction Cooperation and competition among desert organisms is vital to many plants and animals survival. The guinea worm is a parasite which latches onto animals and survives off of them when they drink. With such limited supplies of food and water there is a great deal of competition for resources. For example both the collared lizard and the roadrunner eat the darkling beetle so they must compete for this finite resource. This is why bio-diversity is so vital to the survival of an ecosystem because without a variety of organisms the overlaps in resources would cause competition to drive species to extinction. Desert Food Web–> Major Environmental Issues The desert is an arid environment with dry soil that contains very little moisture. Because of the minimal water many plants reproduce infrequently and animals become dormant during droughts, this means that any damage caused by humans takes longer to recover from. When vegetation is depleted by livestock in a desert environment it may take decades for it to grow back. Some of the major ways that humans are degrading deserts include land disturbance and pollution from mineral mining, a depletion of already limited water supplies (such as in southwestern California), and soil destruction by urban development. These disturbances destroy the delicate balance of life that naturally exists.