Frogs can only survive in areas with permanent water and such areas are rare in a desert.
because then they would be thirsty for more water and since they wouldnt get it they wouldn't survive
Bobcats do live in a desert and do quite well there.
Yes, roadrunners live in the desert as well as scrub and grasslands.
well mostly camle live in the desert why do you ask its an odd question but i can understand
Largebirds and small mammals are the most common predators of a Desert Rain Frog.
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.
Camels normally live in the desert. They have adapted well to the hot, dry desert climate and flourish.
Firstly, one needs to define "desert". Red Kangaroos do not live in sandy deserts because there is not enough food for them. They live in grasslands, bushland and other well-vegetated areas, as well as semi-arid areas where there is plenty of vegetation and permanent waterholes. Much of Australia's desert is not sandy desert, but quite well-vegetated.
Firstly, one needs to define "desert". Red Kangaroos do not live in sandy deserts because there is not enough food for them. They live in grasslands, bushland and other well-vegetated areas, as well as semi-arid areas where there is plenty of vegetation and permanent waterholes. Much of Australia's desert is not sandy desert, but quite well-vegetated.
well thay live in a desert
Centruroides sculpturatus, is most common in the Sonoran Desert and parts of the Chihuahuan Desert but are found in the Mojave as well.
A burrow offers protection from the heat of the desert as well as from predators.