Images © by James L. Reveal, Norton-Brown Herbarium, University
of Maryland, unless otherwise credited.
BSCI 124 Lecture Notes
Department of Plant Biology, University of Maryland
LECTURE 35 - BIOMES, Part 6:
Deserts

Sonoran coastal desert overlooking the Pacific, Baja California
XIII. Deserts
-
A. Introduction:
-
1. Desert: characterized
as regions of seemingly low, sparse vegetation with
minimal
precipitation and humidity, high temperatures during some of the year,
and great daily fluctuations in temperatures.
2. Usually of temperate or subtropical regions.
3. Desert formation a function of climate and topography.
4. Deserts slow to recover from habitat damage; it is still possible to find
wagon tracks from the 1840s in northern Nevada. Indian encampments are often
easy to spot because the vegetation has still not recovered.
5. Numerous unusual plants
and animals make the desert home.

Desert floor and foothill bajadas, Stillwater Range, Nevada

Playa bottom of pluvial lake, Dixie Valley, Nevada

Light snow on the San Rafael Swells, Utah
Main Terrestrial Biome Page
Cold Deserts: Intermountain West
Warm Deserts: Mojave Desert
Warm Deserts: Sonoran Desert
Warm Deserts: Chihuahuan Desert
Last revised: 17 Oct 1997 - Reveal