As of now, no crops are grown in Antarctica since it is not suitable for cultivation.
None it is too cold for crops.
none what so ever
none
No crops grow on Antarctica: it's too cold, the soil is frozen and 98% of the continent is covered with an ice sheet. Plus, it is the driest continent on earth.
No food crops are grown on Antarctica: it's too cold and 98% of the continent is covered with an ice sheet. Plus, there is no permanent or indigenous population to grow crops.
People survived in Antarctica before civilization by hunting and gathering. the people who lived in Antarctica could have obviously NOT grown crops or plants to eat because of the cold temperature.
There are none. It's too cold, the permafrost is too close to the surface, and the growing seasons are much too short to be of any use to grow any crops up there. Food has to be flown in by a cargo plane for the people to actually live in Antarctica.
noneNone. The climate is too cold for any human-cultured crops, though some types of lichens and moss can survive on the northernmost areas.
None. It's too cold to support any kind of food chain.
I think not, read on. Because Antarctica is a "polar" region, there is no precipitation, it has no lakes or rivers and is in fact the driest continent. Average temperatures in the Antarctic interior get down to -70 degrees Celsius during the winter months and -35 degrees Celsius in the warmer months. The coastal temperatures are much warmer with a range of -15 to -32 Celsius in Winter and -5 to +5 Celsius in Summer. The interior of Antarctica is considered the world's driest desert because the extreme cold freezes water vapour out of the air. Annual snowfall on the polar plateau is equivalent to less than 5 cm of rain. Antarctica has some of the strongest winds on earth, with some winds reaching 320 kph.
Antarctica is harsh. It is the highest, coldest, darkest, windiest, driest and iciest continent on earth. There is no native food chain. No animal lives in Antarctica, or is native to the continent.