Antarctica is a continent. In Antarctic waters, which are liquid, the fish survive there because it's their natural habitat.
When the sea ice freezes, the fish simply migrate so that they remain in liquid.
No, the fish in Antarctica adapt to the environment's temperature.
how did antarctica freeze?
The freeze-thaw cycle does happen in Antarctica, but the thaw is never complete.
Antarctica is a continent; fish exist in water. There are various fish that can survive in the waters around Antarctica: the Southern Ocean. They thrive there because they have adapted to their environment.
Fish don't like to live in ice of Antarctica .
No.
Yes.
You freeze.
lots of types of fish live in Antarctica such as the ice fish and the krill fish
Fish go further down than the ice. The ice usually doesn't freeze all the way to the bottom. If the fish are trapped in shallow water or if the lake or stream freezes to the bottom, they will freeze.
NO!! dont ever doo thatYes, BUT, only if the fish was never at 40 degrees or warmer for longer than 2 hrs.Refreezing a previously thawed fish is a food QUALITY issue NOT a food SAFETY issue.
Fish are marine animals. Antarctica is a continent. Fish do not live on continents.