Beavers do live in some deserts of North America but their activities are restricted to rivers with water that flows year round.
if a beaver was to live in the dessert, it would have to burrow in the ground for a home and change its diet to something more accessible in the dessert plus it would need to be able to store fat and sugars for times when there is no food
Size reduction.
the beavers teeth would get so long if they din't bite something so thats why when ever you see a beaver its chewing on a tree. They do that to keep their teeth short
No animal can survive without both. Even having legs is a physical adaptation. If an animal had no behavioral adaptations, it would just sit in one place and die of starvation. So jackrabbits have both physical and behavioral adaptations.
Examples of physical adaptations would include the webbed feet of water birds for swimming and wading in the mud, and their long beaks for scooping up fish or waters ants for feeding. The platypus's flat snout equipped with electoreceptirs is another physical adaptation.
The "camel physical factor" typically refers to the unique adaptations that camels possess for surviving in harsh desert environments. These adaptations include their ability to tolerate extreme temperatures, conserve water, and store fat in their humps, which can be metabolized for energy. Additionally, camels have specialized nasal passages that help retain moisture and thick fur that insulates them against both heat and cold. These physical traits enable camels to thrive in conditions where many other animals would struggle.
it would have to have a wing spand larger than its own body andonly eat insects
Leaves that hold water
They will usually ride on camels as there is alot of camels that belong in a desert. You will find camels in desert because they store water in there hump back and have sandy feet. Deserts are made of sand,rock and mountains. You could even travel on a donkey but it is very unlikely.
You would find a beaver in the wetlands
A beaver would belong to the chordata phylum, same as you and me.
The noun beaver has no adjective form. The closest would be beaver-like.