Here are two of the plants that survive the harsh climate of the Namib Desert in Namibia:
Yes, there are plants in cold deserts. Even some sheltered parts of the Antarctic Desert have a few lichens, mosses and algae.
In any biome, plants are the producers.
some facts about cold deserts are they are cold and mostly no plants can grow their unlike hot deserts with cactuses
In the deserts of North America, some 'spiky plants' are yuccas, agaves and sotols. Many other plants have spines and thorns.
The most common plants in deserts are cacti. These plants are able to go for long period of time without water and that is why they do well in deserts.
No, deserts look quite different. Some are covered by sand, some with rock and some with ice. Some are barren of plants while others have abundant plants. Some have many mountains, others may have rolling hills or plains.
Plants, especially grasses, are the primary producers of deserts.
Europe does not have any deserts. It is too far north of the equator to have the level of heat to create deserts. There are hot and dry places, but no deserts.
All the mainland states have deserts, and all have native plants. Tasmania has no deserts, so logically it has no native desert plants. However it may have plants, also found in deserts.
Deserts have little to no rainfall, although some get raging flash floods at regular times during the year. The animals and plants in deserts are specially designed to fit this harsh environment.
the benefits are the plants (cacti) that grows only in deserts
Romania hasn't tundra and deserts.