Biomes

Hot Desert

Hot, extremely low precipitation
1,149 Animals
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Overview

Understanding This Category

A hot desert is a subtropical to tropical terrestrial biome defined by chronic water deficit, typically receiving very low annual precipitation (often <250 mm/year) while experiencing high potential evapotranspiration that exceeds rainfall for most or all of the year. It is characterized by sparse primary production, strong temperature extremes (especially large diurnal ranges), and organisms adapted to intense heat, drought, and nutrient-poor, often saline soils.

Hot deserts form where dry air, high pressure, and distance from moisture make rain rare while strong sun causes evaporation. Water limits life: plants grow briefly after rare rains, and life centers near ephemeral streams, oases, and shade. Vegetation is patchy—shrubs, succulents, and short-lived annuals with small waxy leaves, deep roots, CAM photosynthesis, dormancy, or seed banks. Many animals are nocturnal or live in burrows to save water. Deserts support specialized, endemic species across dunes, rocky plains, and salt flats.

Key Characteristics

Very low and highly variable precipitation (often <250 mm/year), with long dry periods and rainfall occurring in pulses
Potential evapotranspiration greatly exceeds precipitation, producing chronic water deficit and frequent drought stress
Large day-night (diurnal) temperature swings under clear skies; very hot days are common
Sparse, discontinuous vegetation dominated by xerophytes (e.g., shrubs, succulents) and short-lived annuals that respond rapidly to rain
Soils often coarse-textured and low in organic matter, sometimes saline/alkaline; surfaces may include desert pavement and biological soil crusts
Fauna largely behaviorally adapted to heat and aridity (nocturnality, burrowing, water-conserving physiology), with activity tied to cooler periods and rainfall events
Climate

Climate Conditions

Hot deserts have a very dry climate with little rain, strong sun, and evaporation that is usually greater than rainfall. Days are very hot but clear skies let heat leave at night, causing large day–night temperature swings, especially inland. Rain comes rarely in short storms. Low humidity and drought make plants sparse and animals avoid heat.

Temperature

Typically ~20-35°C (36-63°F) between mean winter and summer temperatures; inland deserts commonly show the largest seasonal and day-night swings.

Average High
Summer daytime highs commonly ~35-45°C (95-113°F); hottest periods can persist for weeks during heat waves.
Average Low
Winter nighttime lows commonly ~5-15°C (41-59°F); inland/elevated hot deserts can drop near 0°C (32°F) on the coldest nights.
Extremes
Record/near-record heat can exceed ~50°C (122°F). Nighttime minima can approach or fall slightly below 0°C (32°F) in some hot deserts, especially at higher elevation or far inland.

Precipitation

Generally ~25-250 mm/year (1-10 in), with many core hot-desert regions closer to ~25-100 mm/year (1-4 in).

Pattern
Highly irregular: precipitation is episodic and often seasonal (e.g., short winter frontal rains or brief summer monsoonal storms). Long dry intervals are common; multi-year droughts can occur.
Humidity
Low average relative humidity (often ~10-30% daytime inland), with higher humidity in coastal deserts but still limited rainfall due to atmospheric stability and cold currents.
Seasonality

Seasonality depends more on temperature and the timing of rare rains than on steady wet/dry seasons. Summer brings extreme heat and strong drying, so animals are active at night, dawn, and in shade. Winter is cooler with less drying, allowing more daytime activity. Productivity comes in pulses: storms trigger rapid germination, flowering, insect outbreaks, then dormancy, seed banking, estivation, or migration.

Growing Season

Growing season is short and variable — from a few days to six to ten weeks after rain. Winter-rain deserts grow in cool fall–spring; summer-monsoon deserts peak mid to late summer. In very dry years it may be almost zero; perennials rely on deep roots, stored water, and dormancy.

Where Found

Global Distribution

Hot deserts (subtropical deserts) occur primarily under the descending limbs of the Hadley cells where persistent high pressure suppresses rainfall. They form broad belts on the western sides and interiors of continents, typically characterized by extremely low annual precipitation (often <250 mm), high potential evapotranspiration, sparse xerophytic vegetation, and strong diurnal temperature ranges.

>=~7.1% of Earth's land surface (>=~2.1% of total Earth surface) of Earth's Surface
>=~10.6 million km² Total Area

Notable Locations

Sahara Desert (Algeria, Libya, Egypt, etc.) Rub' al Khali / Empty Quarter (Saudi Arabia, Oman, UAE, Yemen) Atacama Desert (Chile) and Sechura Desert (Peru) Namib Desert (Namibia) and Skeleton Coast Kalahari Desert (Botswana, Namibia, South Africa) Great Victoria Desert and Simpson Desert (Australia) Sonoran Desert (U.S./Mexico) Mojave Desert (U.S.) Chihuahuan Desert (U.S./Mexico) Thar Desert (India/Pakistan)
Conservation

Conservation Status

Globally, hot deserts remain extensive but are increasingly fragmented and locally degraded; overall conservation concern is moderate-to-high due to accelerating development pressures, groundwater depletion, and rising climate extremes.

Declining Trend
Global area loss is generally low compared with forests, but integrity loss and fragmentation are rising; localized conversion/degradation hotspots can exceed ~0.1-0.3% per year, especially along irrigated margins and infrastructure corridors. Loss Rate

Protection Efforts

  • Expansion and improved management of large protected areas and Indigenous/community conserved areas to maintain connectivity across desert landscapes
  • Strategic environmental assessment and careful siting/mitigation for mining, roads, pipelines, and renewable-energy development (avoidance of key habitats, wildlife crossings, restoration bonds)
  • Groundwater governance: sustainable yield limits, protection of springs/oases, and environmental flow allocations for desert rivers
  • Grazing management (stocking limits, rotational/rest periods) and protection of sensitive soil crusts and dune systems
  • Invasive species prevention and control (especially invasive grasses) to reduce altered fire regimes
  • Off-road vehicle regulation, designated routes, and enforcement to reduce chronic surface disturbance
  • Species-focused recovery programs (e.g., desert ungulates, large predators, threatened reptiles) and anti-poaching measures
  • Long-term monitoring using remote sensing and field networks for vegetation cover, dust, soil stability, and key wildlife populations
Fun Facts

Did You Know?

Hot deserts aren't "always hot": nights can feel shockingly cold because dry air and clear skies let heat radiate away quickly.

Deserts can flood fast-hard, dry soils often can't absorb sudden downpours, so rare storms can trigger powerful flash floods.

Some deserts "drink" fog: in places like the Namib and parts of coastal deserts, fog can be a more reliable water source than rainfall for plants and animals.

Many desert animals get most of their water from food and metabolism (water made inside the body), reducing the need to drink.

After rains, deserts can transform overnight-seeds that waited for years can germinate within days, carpeting landscapes with flowers.

Sand dunes can be noisy: certain dry, well-sorted dunes can produce a deep humming/booming sound when sand avalanches down their slopes.

If the Sahara were a country, it would be roughly the size of the United States (or China)-a continent-scale biome.

At ~9 million km², the Sahara is about the size of the contiguous U.S. plus Alaska combined (a useful mental map for its scale).

A single desert storm can drop a year's worth of rain in hours-like a whole "annual budget" arriving in one sudden deposit.

Day-night temperature swings in hot deserts can feel like experiencing two seasons in 24 hours: scorching daytime heat followed by surprisingly cool evenings.

Desert biological activity often runs on a "night shift": compared with many forests where daytime dominates, deserts may have peak animal movement after sunset to avoid heat and water loss.

The Sahara is the largest hot desert on Earth-covering about 9 million km² (≈3.6 million mi²).

Some hot deserts can go years without measurable rain; parts of the central Sahara are virtually rainless for years.

Hot deserts can have some of the hottest air temperatures recorded-Death Valley (a hot desert region) has produced the highest reliably measured air temperature on Earth: 56.7°C (134°F) at Furnace Creek (1913).

Despite sparse life overall, certain desert microhabitats (like desert wildflower "super blooms" and fog-fed slopes) can become temporarily very biologically intense after rare moisture events.

Many desert plants are extreme water-savers: some cacti and succulents can store enough water to survive long droughts, and many desert shrubs keep leaves tiny (or absent) to reduce water loss.

Hot Desert Animals

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