Camp
Internet's Global Gardening Studies are open to all Camp Expedition
Teams. RAIN's Youth Technology Corps members are Expedition Team Leaders
for Communities taking part.
A Hot
and Dry Desert is, as you can tell from the name, hot and dry. Most Hot
and Dry Deserts don't have very many plants. They do have some low down
plants though. The only animals they have that can survive have the ability
to burrow under ground. This is because they would not be able to live in
the hot sun and heat. They only come out in the night when it is a little
cooler. A cold desert is a desert that has snow in the winter instead of
just dropping a few degrees in temperature like they would in a Hot and
Dry Desert. It never gets warm enough for plants to grow. Just maybe a few
grasses and mosses. The animals in Cold Deserts also have to burrow but
in this case to keep warm, not cool. That is why you might find some of
the same animals here as you would in the Hot and Dry Deserts. Deserts cover
about one fifth of the Earth's land surface. Most Hot and Dry Deserts are
near the Tropic of Cancer or the Tropic of Capricorn. Cold Deserts are near
the Arctic part of the world. Hot and Dry Deserts temperature ranges from
20 to 25ƒ C. The extreme maximum temperature for Hot Desert ranges from
43.5 to 49ƒ C. Cold Deserts temperature in winter ranges from
-2 to 4ƒ C and in the summer 21 to 26ƒ C a year The precipitation in Hot
and Dry Deserts and the precipitation in Cold Deserts is different. Hot
and Dry Deserts usually have very little rainfall and/or concentrated rainfall
in short periods between long rainless periods. This averages out to under
15 cm a year. Cold Deserts usually have lots of snow. They also have rain
around spring. This averages out to 15 - 26 cm a year. Hot and Dry Deserts
are warm throughout the fall and spring seasons and very hot during the
summer. the winters usually have very little if any rainfall. Cold Deserts
have quite a bit of snow during winter. The summer and the beginning of
the spring are barely warm enough for a few lichens, grasses and mosses
to grow. Hot and Dry Deserts vegetation is very rare. Plants are almost
all ground-hugging shrubs and short woody trees. All of the leaves are replete
(packed with nutrients). Some examples of these kinds of plant are Turpentine
Bush, Prickly Pears, and Brittle Bush. For all of these plants to survive
they have to have adaptations. Some of the adaptations in this case are
the ability to store water for long periods of time and the ability to stand
the hot weather. Cold Desert's plants are scattered. In areas with little
shade,about 10 percent of the ground is covered with plants. In some areas
of sagebrush it reaches 85 percent. The height of scrub varies from 15 cm
to 122 cm. All plants are either deciduous and more or less contain spiny
leaves. Hot and Dry Deserts animals include small nocturnal (only active
at night) carnivores. There are also insects, arachnids, reptiles, and birds.
Some examples of these animals are Borrowers, Mourning Wheatears, and Horned
Vipers. Cold Deserts have animals like Antelope, Ground Squirrels, Jack
Rabbits, and Kangaroo Rats.