No animal 'lives' in Antarctica. However, many sea birds and sea mammals visit the continent's beaches to breed.
There are no cold-blooded animals that thrive in the Antarctic region.
The only known warm blooded animals to live in Antarctica are the temporary workers in support of science and the scientists who study the health of planet earth on the continent. Otherwise, sea mammals breed on Antarctica's beaches, but make their homes in sea water.
not all of them can You are probably confusing warm blooded with cold blooded. Warm blooded animals can live just about anywhere, but cold blooded animals can only live in areas they can keep warm, otherwise they die.
What's true is that no animals live on the Antarctica, but that a few sea birds and aquatic mammals use the beaches in Antarctica for breeding.
You will only find animals on or near Antarctica's beaches during breeding season -- no animals live on the continent.
The only 'animals' that live on the Mawson base in Antarctica are humans: the temporary workers and scientists studying the health of planet earth.
Hibernation is a natural phenomenon practiced by animals that live on other continents, not Antarctica. No animals live on the continent of Antarctica, because it's too cold and there is no food chain.
There are no caves in Antarctica -- only crevasses formed by ice tongues at the water's edge. No animals live on the continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain.
There are no native animals in Antarctica. You could consider the humans who work and live on the continent on a temporary basis, land animals.
Humans are the only meat-eating animals in Antarctica, and all the meat they consume is shipped in. There are no animals that live in Antarctica: it's too cold to support life or any kind of food chain.
All animals associated with Antarctica only breed on its beaches; none live on the continent -- it's too cold and there is no food chain.
Animals only visit Antarctica in order to breed on land. Otherwise they live in the sea. There is no food chain on the continent, and it is too cold to support life.
Any animal on the Antarctic continent is only visiting there to breed. No animals 'live' on the continent.