Yes.
There are many ways in which the cacti plants have adapted to the desert including needing less water to live. These cacti plants have also developed very sharp needles to prevent animals from taking the water inside.
They store water when it rains, inside of them
no they do not leave in desert because they need water, soil for living.
Few desert plants live in sand. Most live in soil which may be a sandy soil but is not like sterile sand with little water and plant nutrition.
plants can live in all sorts of places. in water like cattails or whatever you call those things, then there's flowers and desert plants too. they can live about anywhere
As long as the plant has enough water in it, yes it will live As long as the plant has enough water in it, yes it will live
they travel on camels to get places to get water they cut open plants and get water they live in tents
By definition, in the desert
Yes, plants like cacti that live in the desert tend to have fewer stomata compared to plants in the rainforest. This adaptation helps reduce water loss through transpiration, as stomata are the primary sites for water vapor to exit the plant. The reduced number of stomata in desert plants helps them conserve water in dry environments.
There are a variety of plants called succulents that live in the deserts, plants that can store water in their tissues. One group of succulent plants are the cacti.
i don't know, but i can tell you this by looking at the list at the international flora record organization's list of the sahara (note i will not say sahara desert because sahara means desert) is well over 5,000.
Yes, plants live in all but the most exteme of deserts such as the Antarctic where few plants live and are rare in the Atacama Desert.