by eating food and staying in the shade
Sleeps in burrows during the day
It depends upon the desert and season of the year. A snowman could survive almost indefinitely in Antarctica. A snowman would only survive a few short hours in the Mojave or Sahara during the summer.
Because of the lack of food and water also with the extreme heat during the day and extreme cold during the night. Most people die of heat stroke
Yes, snails can and do survive in the desert. There are several species of land snail that do quite well in the Chihuahuan Desert where I live. They are only active during rainy periods and spend the rest of the year burrowed below the surface.
By depending on other organisms like plants during photosynthesis to make their food
well it has a range that covers most of North America. it lives at most in semi desert areas. To survive it sleeps during the heat of the day and at night comes out to hunt. what does it eat? desert foul, and pretty much what ever it can catch. , but primarily birds
Yes it is hot and cold in the desert. During the day, the desert heats up, which gives them their extreme temperatures. but at night, the desert is very cold.
A scorpion will travel through the desert with it's stinger (tail) out ready to attack it's prey so the scorpion can eat it. The scorpion will mostly stay under rocks where it is cooler than out in the boiling sun. They roam around at night to avoid the heat of the daytime sun.
The saguaro can store large amounts of water during the rainy season to survive during the dry times.
Cattle generally require the help of man to survive in a desert. Man must provide a source of drinking water and often must provide additional food during times of drought when little grass is available.
climate effect others and the way they live because there isn't a lot in deserts and they don't get a lot of rainfall during the day so really no one get much nutrients in the desert so that is why people don't always survive in deserts
The climate is extreme: annual temperatures can range from near-freezing (32 degress F) in the winter to more than 50 degrees C (122 degrees F.) during the summer.