1. Long, vertical roots enabling a plant to reach water beneath the soil.
2. Succulent plants store water in their stems, roots, or leaves.
3. Some plants have a waxy coating on stems and leaves to help reduce water loss.
windy, not that much sun, not shade, need sunlight to make oxygen through their leaves.
Some draw moisture from the air, others grow very long and deep roots.
these plants like cactuses save water when it rains and stores it so they font die of dehyadration
Because they feel like it
they have long roots that reach for water
just H2O I guess...and sunlight
Nothing
Yes Phoenix dactylifera, the Date Palm is a desert plant (or desert marginal plant), although found mainly around water (such as an oasis) in the desert
they live in water
They are wooly.
Cory bray's
I think you can easily find any desert plant with adaptations
Size reduction.
Because the plant grows in clumps it keeps warm in the desert
Llamas are domesticated animals and do not occur naturally in the desert. The vicuña and guanaco are wild cousins of the llama and do occur on the fringes of the Atacama Desert where they feed on sparse plant life and get their water from the plants they eat.
Leaves that hold water
The Sturt Desert Pea is a unique plant of the dry Australian desert areas. It is not so much that this native plant gets water in a particular way: it is more that it has unique adaptations to conserve its water. The Sturt Desert Pea will flower for many weeks when it rains, but during dry periods, it closes up and waits for the next rain.
Big ears!
A cactus is a plant that lives in the desert.
They it Monkeys for FUn
they have long defensive horns.
It is most commonly found in the Sonora Desert and parts of the Chihuahuan Desert.
The cactus has a number of structural adaptations that allow it to live in the harsh conditions of the desert. Many other plants lack these adaptations and cannot survive in a desert.