It depends where the desert is. But in common to all, the primary producers are plants. Many are perennial, while a lot are ephemeral and only appear after rain. In the American southwest, typical producers are cacti, yuccas and creosote bush, while ephemerals are poppies, daisies, lupines, milkweeds, and Datura, among many others.
There is no such place as the 'Savannah Desert.' The savanna is a grassland and a different biome from a desert. It receives more rainfall than a desert.
Most insects, some lizards, some birds, tortoises, large herbivores - any animal that feeds on plants or seeds are primary consumers.
consumers eat producers,such as insects eating plants && other stuff lol
The savanna is not a desert. It is a grassland.
Thermus aquaticus Thermus thermophilus Chloroflexus aurantiacus Pyrodictium abyssi
Deserts have the same four seasons as elsewhere - summer, fall, winter and spring.
There are four trophic levels in an ecological pyramid. They are primary producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and tertiary consumers.
Massachusetts and Wisconsin are the top two cranberry producing states in America.
1.desert 2.tundra 3.boreal forest 4.grassland 5.temperate decidous forest
The five largest deserts in the world are:1.) Antarctic Desert2.) Sahara3.) Arabian Desert4.) Gobi Desert5.) Kalahari DesertSome consider the Arctic to be a desert but the Arctic consists mostly of season sea ice and areas of tundra. Most scientists consider it to be a separate biome from the desert.
plants
makibaoh