If you mean 'what are the abiotic factors of a desert,' they include: soil, sand, gravel, rock, water and air.
Abiotic (nonliving) factors - such as sand, soil, gravel, rock, water, etc.
Nonliving, it's an ecosystem, not an organism.
Sand, soil, gravel, rocks, water, air - all are abiotic (nonliving) factors in a desert.
Sand, rock, soil, water, air - are all nonliving things found in a desert.
Sand, soid, gravel, rock, water and light are all abiotic (nonliving) factors in a desert.
Soil, rocks, sand, gravel, water, air and light are all nonliving (abiotic) factors in the Mojave Desert.
A desert has both biotic (living) as well as abiotic (nonliving) factors.
A desert contains both living (biotic) and nonliving (abiotic) factors.
Your question is an oxymoron. Nonliving means they are dead. If it is dead it ceases to be an organism. Organisms are alive.
Deserts are nonliving and incapable of adapting. Instead, organisms adapt to the desert.
rocks and sand?
Abiotic factors in the desert include soil, sand, gravel, rocks, water, air, light.