The savanna is too wet to be a desert and too dry to be a forest.
It's part of the Great Eurasian Steppe. Semi-desert areas with grass and shrubs.There are no trees in the steppe apart from where there are lakes or rivers.The areas that are too dry to be a forest and not dry enough to be a desert.
A savanna is a semi-arid region that receives more rainfall than a desert but not enough to support a forest.
Steppe's are vast expanses of level, treeless tracts of land. The climate of steppe's is usually too dry to support a forest, but not dry enough to be a desert.
Both the Antarctic Desert and the Atacama Desert are exceedingly dry and receive virtually no precipitation.
grasslands :)
Savanna is the transition zone between a forest and a desert.
Grassland
There is no such thing as the Savanna Desert. The savanna is a semi-arid transitional biome between a desert and another biome such as a grassland. The largest is in Africa below the Sahara Desert.
too dry
No, it's far too dry in the desert to produce rice.
Ocelots do not live in the desert. Too dry, too hot, no food, and they do not blend in to their backgrounds.
Grasslands. Tropical grasslands are also known as savannas.