Madison
Decomposers
Desert Varnish
One unique type of bacteria found in
the desert is “desert varnish.” This is a
type of bacteria that can turn desert rocks shades of
green, orange, and yellow. This type of bacteria is believed
to be one of the oldest living
organisms on Earth.
An decomposer is an animal that breaks down the dead or decaying organisms.
Thorny devil
Size: 16cmDiet: Ants and termitesClass: reptiles Scientific Name: Moloch horridus
Fennec fox
Size:37 - 41 cmDiet: Small mammalsClass: MammalsScientific Name: Vulpes zerda
Lappet-Faced Vulture
Size: 100 - 115 cmDiet: Carrion (dead animals)Class: BirdsScientific Name: Torgos tracheliotus
HerbivoresAn herbivore is an animal that is adapted to eat
plants
Desert lark
Size: 15 cmDiet: seedsClass: BirdsScientific Name: Ammomanes
deserti
Fat sand rat
Size: 14 - 18.5 cmDiet: Seeds, vegetationClass: MammalsScientific Name: Psammomys obesus
Addax
Size: 1.3 m tail: 25 - 35 cm Diet: Plants Class: MammalsScientific Name: Addax
nasomaculatus
OmnivoresAn animal that has adapted to eat plants as well
as hunt and eat meat
Great Jerbaro
Size: 19 – 15 cm tail: 16 - 22 cmDiet: Seeds and insects Class: Mammal Scientific Name: Allactaga major
Coyote
Size: 44 -52 inches tail: 14-inch Diet: of mice, rats, insects, rabbits and plantsClass: MammalsScientific Name: Canis latrans
White tailed antelope ground squirrel
Size: 15 -16 cm tail: 6-7 cmDiet: seeds, fruits, vegetation, arthropods, and carrion.Class: MammalsScientific Name: Ammospermophilus leucurus
In the food wed below the producer are the seeds and grass, the ants are first level consumers, the Great Jerbaro the ground squirrel and the Thorny Devil are all second level consumers. The final level is the Coyote the third level consumer that receives the lest amount of energy from the sun.
On this food web below the producers are the seeds and grass like most food webs in the desert. The second level consumers is just the Fat Sand Rat. The third level consumers are the Fennec fox and Sidewinder snake. The Dingo is the fourth level and finally the animal that gets the lest energy is the Lappet-Faced Vulture that mostly eats dead organisms or sometime large alive ones.
What abiotic and biotic factors help these types of animals to live in this area?
Abiotic= are nonliving factors Biotic= are living factors
There are many different types of Abiotic factors in the desert. A few of these are water, sunlight heat rocks and soil/sand. Soil/sand can help small prey such as a Fat Sand Rat to borrow into the ground to hide from prey. Other factors such as water barely affect these animals because they have adapted to be able to survive with little water. In the desert there are also biotic factors that help these organisms survive. A few examples of this is food such as other animals or plants and protection from vegetation. The Addax above is a great example of something like this. He can help other organisms by protecting and defending them from other predators like the Desert Lark. The addax might want vegetation near this birds nest and protect her nearby predators that are too afraid to attack. This is one way an animal can help another animal with maybe not even knowing it.
What special adaptions allow these animals to live in this Biome?These animals have very many adaptions that need to occur in order to survive in this ecosystem. The number one priority they need is water to be able to be stored for long amounts of time. Another adaptation that is necessary is the food they need to survive. They need to have access to a stable food supply such as near an area with a lot of vegetation or maybe near a reliable water supply such as a small sprig in the cooler parts of a desert. Also a less obvious adaption is that a few animals have is the adaption of scales or fur that reflects heat from its body to protect itself from the suns harmful rays. These are a few adaptions needed to live in the Desert Biome.
Sources http://www.itsnature.org/ground/mammals-la
nd/white-tailed-antelope-squirrel/http://edtech.kennesaw.edu/web/desert.htmlhttp://
www.mbgnet.net/sets/desert/animals/index.htm
http://www.tutorvista.com/biology/abiotic-factors-of-the-desert
I also used some images from Google images.