There are 26 major desert areas in the world and each has its own specific climate data so there is no single answer to your question. Temperatures range from a low record temperature of -135.8 degrees F in Antarctica to a record +134 degrees F in Death Valley of the Mojave Desert.
Deserts have very low humidity and very high temperatures, very low temperatures, or can alternate between the two. Heat and low humidity can cause fatal dehydration in a matter of hours. Low temperatures can cause hypothermia. Some deserts are prone to dust storms.
Deserts get little rainfall and some of them are quite hot - but not all. There are cold deserts also.
There are hot subtropical deserts, cold winter deserts and cool coastal deserts so you need to specify a particular desert location.
There is no meaningful answer to this question as there are over 2 dozen major desert regions in the world and each has different climate statistics. There are hot deserts, there are cold deserts and there are cool deserts.
water availability, high temperatures, and limited food sources.
The biome described is a desert. Deserts have high daytime temperatures, low nighttime temperatures, and very limited precipitation. Organisms in deserts are adapted to survive in extreme temperatures and dry conditions.
Some deserts have low elevation, some have a rather high elevation. Not all deserts have a low altitude.
no one stinken knows what the high and the low temperatures are for christmas florida
There are both cold deserts as well as hot deserts.
No. Height varies widely. There is even a formal division between high deserts (above 2,000 ft) and low deserts.
Deserts have very high temperatures in the daytime, and lower temperatures in the nighttimes. In the day, the temperature can go over 105 degrees F.Clarification:Some deserts are hot but others, such as the Atacama Desert and Antarctica are cool or even bitter cold.
Precipitation is low in deserts because of the dry air, high temperatures, and the presence of high-pressure systems that prevent moisture from reaching these regions. Additionally, the lack of nearby water bodies and mountain ranges that could help generate precipitation through orographic lifting further contributes to the low precipitation levels in deserts.