Amazon Desert

The Amazon Desert is a vast desert where the Amazon Rainforest that shifts in the world's weather patterns abruptly transformed the vegetated region into some of the driest land on Earth. It is almost as hot as the Sahara Desert of North Africa and has some lush green oases and the Amazon River flows eastward through Brazil and empties into the Atlantic Ocean. The animals of the Amazon Desert are adapted for life in this vast sandy desert. The most successful animals in the area are still the mammals, including the large descendants of tapirs, which can live like hippos and even the desert-dwelling llamas which can behave like camels and gallop like antelopes. Despite the loss of their habitat, a number of species of monkey survived, including the descendants of howler monkeys which lived in the peaceful oasis and fed on fruits, grubs and fish. The predators of the Amazon Desert are some mammals and mostly reptiles, including a large-sized descendant of the ocelot which can blend in with the surroundings in the desert, a wolf-sized descendants of bush dogs which can hunt in packs and even a large-sized descendant of the caimans which can live like crocodiles.