A desert is not good for a polar bear because it can't help it live. For example polar bears eat fish and other animals so if they lived in the desert it would be most likely that they wouldn't be able to find food and soon enough they would be extinct. Hope I helped :)ANS2:That question presumes that polar bears don't do just fine in a desert...The frozen wastelands of the north are a form of desert because they have little liquid precipitation and plant life is scarce. Polar bears aren't found in any large numbers in other habitats.
Bears generally stay in the mountains in the deserts but do come to the desert floor on occasion.
Bears do live in the desert. I live in the Chihuahuan Desert and bears occasionally come down from the local mountains to the desert floor. As long as they have a water source they survive quite well.
Yes, bears do live and survive in deserts but generally prefer the mountain regions of deserts.
No, polar bears are adapted to living in the northern polar region, the Arctic, where they spend much of their time hunting seals on the sea ice. They might survive in Antarctic Desert but they are not native to that continent.
Yes, it would survive in a desert. As some people would say a desert is a hot, inhospitable place to be, but a desert is a place with nothing in it, so that means that the arctic and Antarctica is a desert.
Actually, the polar bear's numbers are higher today than in recent memory, with a population of around 25000.
Yes, there are many 'hairy' animals in the desert - cougars, bobcats, bears, badgers, raccoons, etc.
Yes, eagles can and do survive in the desert. I have seen golden eagles in the Chihuahuan Desert and none seemed to be suffering.
Where the Bears Are - 2012 Bears in the Desert 1-22 was released on: USA: 15 October 2012
Yes, cougars and bears are occasionally seen in the Sonoran Desert.
Yes