Water damage during rare occasions of heavy rain.
Flash flooding is probably the greatest disaster threat in a desert.
A sandstorm can happen but that's all i know about
the nubain ibex is not endanger its now extince.Its habbitat was desert.
dust storms
yes desert is a natural phenomena as everything in desert has a natural significance like sand,plantsetc.
Flash flooding is not unusual in some deserts.
Anything not human trash or construction is natural in the desert.
Humans are primarily responsible for damaging the desert.
The Taklamakan Desert is completely natural and not man made.
Predators of desert locust
One disaster would prove to be a wildfire. It would rebuild just like any other habitat would. SO I think the real qustion is, How do deserts rebuild after natural disasters?
Both Humans and natural fire are the causes of forest fires. The Great Otago Fire of the 1300's was at least coincident with the arrival of the Maori, and in the North Island there is clear evidence via palynology of cut-and-burn practices.European settlers have created de-forestation. In the far north there is evidence of pre-human natural disasters, and also in the central North Island.The Taupo Volcano has an Volcanic Explosivity Index of 8, the highest recorded in the world, and the big explosion of about CE180 is noted from Chinese and Roman records. This would have destroyed immense areas of forest.There used to be two named desert areas of the North Island, the Central plateau desert (Rangipo Desert) and the Kaiangaroa Desert to the east. Both of these are natural disasters of fairly recent origin.