There is no such thing as a 'savanna desert.' The savanna is a disticnt biome and is the transition zone between a desert and another biome, such as a grassland. It is a semi arid zone that receives a bit more rain than a desert and, therefore, can support more plant and animal life. There are vast areas of savannah below the Sahara in Africa.
Both the Kalahari and Namib Deserts are south of the Savanna.
There is no such thing as a Savanna Desert. A savanna is a semi-arid transition zone between a desert and another biome such as a grassland. The greatest expanse of savanna is in Africa below the Sahara.
Desertification is the term you are looking for.
Forests, Deserts, Tundra, Taiga, Savanna, Prairie...
Nigeria is a country in the western part of Africa located between the tropic of Cancer and north of the equator. It has 2 major types of vegetation, A rich tropical rain forest in the South and Savanna vegetation in central Nigeria and North. The savanna vegetation is further divided into 3 types, The Guinea savanna in central Nigeria, Sudan Savanna and the Sahel savannah.
Savanna
The climate that typically has grasslands located between deserts and rainforests is a semi-arid or tropical savanna climate. These regions are characterized by a marked dry season and receive moderate to low levels of rainfall, supporting grassland ecosystems.
No! While some deserts do have vast plains, a plain can also be a savanna or grassland.
Depending upon your location, there are deserts, forests and or beaches.
Savannas have grass that attracts herbivores that are the prey of predators.
The transition zone between a desert and a forest is a savanna.
Savannas and deserts are two distinct biomes. There is no such thing as a Savanna Desert. However, plants are always the producers in any biome and in a savanna that would primarily be grasses.