No, it is cooler in the desert at night but not 'winter cool.' Deserts experience a regular winter season, however.
That depends on which desert you are referring to but the Antarctic Desert has measured a temperature of -135 degrees at night during the winter.
it goes into the minuses depending on the desert
Yes, because at night in deserts it's ALWAYS cold. Then in the morning, it gets BURNING hot.
Antarctica is the coldest desert on earth.
In the summer the temperature may drop into the 60s and 70s (degrees F.) at night. In the winter, 40s and 50s with a few nights that may drop below freezing in parts of the desert.
Scorpions, snakes, spiders, heat; dehydration as well as hypothermia at night in mid winter
That is not a problem as even the hottest deserts can get quite chilly in the winter, especially at night.
Scorpions, snakes, Spiders, heat; dehydration as well as hypothermia at night in mid winter
Most deserts that have cacti do not get cold, except in the dead of winter. Even those cacti growing in a cold winter desert have adapted to survive some freezing weather. However, if a usually hot desert has a sudden severe freeze in winter, some species of cacti are unable to survive.
The Karakum Desert is a cold winter desert with a hot summer and a cold winter.
Cold Winter Deserts:Antarctica,Gobi Desert,Patagonian Desert,Monte Desert,Great Basin Desert,Karakum Desert,Colorado Plateau DesertTaklamakan DesertSome cold winter deserts may get quite hot during the summer but can be bitterly cokd in winter.
Cold winter deserts can drop well below 0 degrees F in winter. The Gobi has been known to drop to -40 degrees or even colder. The Antarctic Desert has had a temperature measured at -135.8 degrees F.