Yes there is an edible plant in Antarctica. The sub-Antarctic edible plant is known as Kerguelen Cabbage.
Food in Antarctica is generally called edible.
Antarctica is polar: tropical plants grow in the tropics. There are no tropical plants in Antarctica.
A.J Hilliker has written: 'A literature survey of the genotoxic material in edible plants' -- subject(s): Dangerous plants, Edible Plants, Plants, Edible
Alan M Cvancara has written: 'Edible wild plants and herbs' -- subject(s): Edible Wild plants, Wild plants, Edible
There are no tropical plants in Antarctica. Antarctica is a polar continent and essentially nothing grows there.
Paushali Das has written: 'Wild edible plants of Tripura tribes' -- subject(s): Edible Wild plants, Wild foods, Wild plants, Edible
Muriel Sweet has written: 'Common Edible & Useful Plants of the West' -- subject(s): Botany, Economic, Botany, Plants, Edible, Economic Botany, Edible Plants
Antarctica is the continent that has the fewest flowering plants.
A. B. Katende has written: 'Wild food plants and mushrooms of Uganda' -- subject(s): Edible Mushrooms, Edible Wild plants, Identification, Mushrooms, Edible, Plant names, Popular, Popular Plant names, Wild plants, Edible
you can eat it
Emile Massal has written: 'Food plants of the South Sea Islands' -- subject(s): Edible Plants, Oceanica, Plants, Edible
The only plants in Antarctica are a few small shrubs of grass. Research shows that Antarctica used to be warm and blooming with plants of all kinds before it drifted south.