desert
A desert cools much faster than a swamp as rock and sand does not retain heat very well, while the water in a swamp is a very good retainer of heat.Clarification:Clouds and high humidity act as a blanket that prevents the heat from a swamp from radiating into space once the sun goes down. The desert usually has no such protection and the heat quickly radiates into space once the sun goes down.
A desert cools much more repidly than a swamp because there is little humidity to help hold the heat.
A desert usually has little cloud cover and high humidity that would hold in day time heating. Therefore, the desert cools quite quickly when the sun sets.
A desert will cool off much more quickly as there is little humidity or cloud cover that would hold in the heat of the day.
Desert areas usually have a low relative humidity and few clouds that would hold in day time heating at night. Without these, the heat of the desert quickly radiates back into space once the sun sets so nights are much cooler.
That would depend upon which desert and your specific location in that desert.
yes cause the desert is a dry land so they need more roots to get water to the plant -science teacher 101
yes cause the desert is a dry land so they need more roots to get water to the plant -science teacher 101
The most hot and humid environment would typically be a swamp, due to the combination of high temperatures and moisture levels associated with wetlands. Deserts, wood forests, and mountain ranges generally do not have as high levels of humidity as swamps.
Most rodents would feed at night.
Generally, no. Most deserts have few clouds and little humidity which would normally act as a blanket to hold in heat. At night, the heat of the desert quickly radiates back into space and the desert can become quite chilly.
A. The land would become a desert. Without sufficient rain, there would be little water for plants to grow, leading to dry conditions and desertification.