That depends upon the species. Some cacti can survive lengthy periods below zero while other species will not tolerate any temperature that falls below freezing.
The cactus has the ability to store water in its fleshy stem so it can survive long periods of drought.
There is no such thing as a "Joshua Cactus." There is, however, the Joshua tree which is a tree-like yucca found mainly in the Mojave Desert. It can live for hundreds of years and some specimens as old as 1000 years have been found.
The Saguaro which may reach as high as 50 feet and live as long as 150 years.
Yes, a cactus can live in a terrarium. A cactus is a survivor that adapts to a wide range of conditions. What it handles poorly are cold and dampness. So one of the smaller cactus plants should have no problems with a terrarium life style as long as coldness and dampness are controlled.
The Antarctic Desert is cold all year long.
A cactus that has flowers is giving the flowers fluids from within. A cactus is like a camel except with many more chambers. The cactus stores moisture for long periods of time.
The red cactus ives for around 1-2 years
In the desert Mojave Desert
It can possibly live up to ten years
Well, a camel can survive days without water. A cactus hold water and camels eat that and consume the water and can survive days with the water held in its stomach. Hope that helped you :D
The Antarctic Desert is cold all year long. The Patagonian Desert remains quite chilly throughout the year, also.
The cactus has spiny leaves so the water that it retains can't evaporate so easily, and for protection.The cactus has spiny leaves so the water that it retains can't evaporate so easily, and for protection.