Want this question answered?
Deserts are arid, nor semiarid. Semiarid regions are usually grasslands or steppe. The danger is that human abuse of these regions will turn them into true deserts.
The jaguars preferred habitats are usually swamps and wooded regions, but jaguars also live in scrublands and deserts.
Missouri does not have any form of dessert there. Desserts are usually found closer to the equator than closer to a pole. Desserts are food. Deserts are dry regions on earth. I'm sure Missouri has desserts.
Hot deserts are usually sandy. Cold deserts are usually rocky
Generally, deserts located furthest from the tropics are cold deserts. The closer to the tropics, the warmer the desert. Some are considered cold because they are at a higher altitude and others considered as cool desert because they are on a coastline that has cold ocean currents just off shore
Deserts are arid, nor semi-arid. Therefore, your question is invalid. Semi-arid regions are usually grasslands or steppes.
Deserts are arid not semiarid. Therefore, there is no such thing as a semiarid desert. Semiarid regions are usually grasslands or steppe.
Your question is an oxymoron. If a region is semi-desert, it is not a desert. A desert receives less than 10 inches (250 mm) of rainfall on average per year. A semiarid region receives 10 inches to 20 inches (500 mm) and is not a desert. It is a distinct biome.
Mexico has both deserts on the north as well as tropical rainforests on the south; these regions usually have hot climates. Some regions along the Sierra Madre mountain ranges can get quite cold, and some of them have seasonal snowfalls during winter.
they aren't. Deserts are usually cold at night.
Plateaus are usually found in deserts.
High atmospheric pressure generally suppresses the development of rain clouds. The earth has belts of high pressure, usually between latitudes of 25 - 35 degrees north or south, where many of the earth's deserts are located.