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.
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.
Reptiles are not warm blooded. Not enough heat.
Frogs are cold blooded and its way to cold on Antarctica.
No
There is no animal known as 'Antarctic Wolf'. There is an Arctic wolf that lives in the northern hemisphere.
No, chickens can't live in Antarctica. It's too cold there for any animal to live on the continent.
Euglena are not warm blooded animals, however they need to stay warm to live. They also can live inside of a warm blooded animal.
No animals live on Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain there.
All the sea birds that breed on Antarctica's beaches do not die from being in Antarctica.
No animal lives in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain. Some animals -- sea birds and sea mammals, breed on Antarctica's coast, and their food chain is in the oceans where they 'live'.
No. Antarctica is too cold to support animal life and there is no food chain there.
No. Birds and platypuses are warm blooded, but they lay eggs(: