No.
No. They are not. They don't eat the waste products of other organisms and convert it back into nutrients.
no...
yes
Polar Bears Arctic Fox's Coyotes Grizzly bears Killer Whales
yES THEY DO CUT THE FINS IN THE KILLER WHALES IN THE TUNDRA
Killer whales or Orca whales usually reside in the oceans of the arctic.
There are Arctic salmon, walruses, seals, killer whales, etc.
lots of animals can be found in the tundra. these can include penguins, polar bears, arctic rabbits, the arctic fox, wolves, and of course whales.
Animals in the Arctic include Arctic hares, lemmings, musk oxen, caribou, Arctic foxes, Arctic wolves, polar bears, wolverines, ermines, Arctic ground squirrels, seals, walruses, baleen whales, Narwhals, killer whales, and belugas.
Because they have to eat 56 lbs of oatmeal a day and Jupiter just ran out.
arctic foxes, arctic hares , polar bears , killer whales , seals, and musk oxen
Some of the animals that live in the Arctic Ocean are beluga whales, killer whales, narwhals, seals, walruses , some kind of sharks
Th Arctic tundra refers to cold, flat lands that always have a layer of frozen soil a few inches below the surface, called permafrost. Because marine animals by definition live in the ocean and not on land, there aren't marine animals in the tundra. However, many marine animals such as fish, killer whales, sea lions, and more live in the Arctic, and a few, such as sea lions, may rest on the shoreline of the tundra.
Tundra. The arctic tundra in the summer and then they migrate to the Boreal Forest in the winter.
There are a few different animals in the arctic that could be referred to as "toothy." These include polar bears, arctic wolves, arctic foxes, walrus, and even killer whales.