To an extent, yes.
The North American black bear populations in Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, western Texas, and Northern Mexico have been known to dwell the deserts, but don't live there permanently, and usually live in national parks nearby.
Also, when grizzly bear populations were more plentiful in previous times, they were known to live in the desert as well. The Atlas bear, which is now extinct, also lived in the North African deserts.
There is a rare species of bear that does live in a desert. The Gobi bear, a subspecies of Brown bear, does live in the Gobi Desert, though it is rare.
No, grizzly bears live in forest biomes.
No, pandas live in bamboo forests and not in the desert.
Polar bears do not live in the desert. They live in the Arctic.
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, cougars and bears are occasionally seen in the Sonoran Desert.
No, grizzly bears live in forest biomes.
Polar Bears inhabit Arctic areas and do not live naturally in Nevada.
No. There are no bears in Antarctica of any species.
They live in the Gobi Desert which is located in Asia in between Northern China and Southern Mongolia.
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.
Kiwi do not live in the Sahara Desert. They do not live in any desert anywhere; nor do they live in any other country apart from New Zealand.
no they coulden't, it's not there nrmal place were they live.