The only true ice desert is Antarctica and no plants grow there except for a few nonvascular plants that survive along the coast where there is no ice and somewhat milder conditions.
Plants in ice deserts, like the Arctic and Antarctic, include mosses, lichens, grasses, and other hardy vegetation adapted to extreme cold conditions. These plants have unique strategies to survive in the harsh environment, such as growing low to the ground to conserve heat and moisture. They play a crucial role in the ecosystem by providing food and habitat for various animals in these regions.
The Antarctic Desert is a polar or ice desert.
Maine has no true deserts. It does have a small area of barren silt uncovered during the last ice age but it only resembles a desert superficially.
Deserts are hot and rainforests are temperate.
Antarctica is an ice desert and the largest desert in the world.
Almost the entire continent of Antarctica is a desert, much of it covered in ice,
Yes, the Antarctic Desert is a true ice (or polar) desert. Those parts of the Arctic that occur on land are better described as tundra. Much of the Arctic is either open sea or frozen sea ice.
By definition, in the desert
Desert plants carry out photosynthesis as do other plants to produce their own food.
I'm pretty sure there was no ice god because the Egyptians lived in the desert, and last I checked, there was no ice in the desert!
There is no such desert named the "Safari Desert."