Cacti are natives only to the Americas. If there are any cacti in the Sahara they did not get there naturally and may have become a noxious invasive species.
i don't know, but i can tell you this by looking at the list at the international flora record organization's list of the sahara (note i will not say sahara desert because sahara means desert) is well over 5,000.
The Sahara Desert covers approximately 294,900 square miles of Chad.
The Sahara Desert covers most of North Africa. The Sahara Desert is the largest subtropical hot desert and third largest desert in the world, after Antarctica and the Arctic.
The Sahara covers most of the northern third of Africa. It is the largest hot desert in the world and the second largest overall, behind the Antarctic Desert. For more information on the largest deserts click here:
Cairo is in the Sahara Desert.
No cacti grow naturally in the Sahara. Cacti are natives of the Americas, not Africa.
Counting all the cacti in a desert is a virtual impossibility.
No cacti live naturally in the Sahara. Cacti are strictly natives of the Americas.
Cacti are native to the Americas and are not found naturally in the Sahara Desert.
No, mealworms do not eat cacti and cacti do not occur naturally in the Sahara. Cacti are natives to American deserts.
Cacti are from the Americas and not native to the Sahara.
No, cacti are strictly New World plants. They do not grow naturally in the Sahara. Any cacti you might see there were planted by man.
people leopards lions (although these will only eat the small or the young ones,] jackals and hyenas.
Yes, many cacti genera are found in the desert.
Cacti are not native to the Sahara Desert. Instead, the Sahara Desert is home to a variety of drought-resistant plants like thorny acacias, date palms, and grasses that have adapted to survive in the arid environment.
Orange trees, herbs, fig trees, magaria, olive trees, cacti, and wild gourds.
Yes, besides dates in the Sahara, there are several cacti in the American deserts that produce edible fruit.