Two types of grasses grow on the western side of the Antarctic Peninsula, otherwise there is no botany on the continent.
Ninety-eight percent of Antarctica is covered with a permanent ice sheet.
None, it's too cold there for most trees and plants to grow.
No, there are no trees in Antarctica.
There are no trees in Antarctica.
There are no trees in Antarctica.
Although Antarctica does not have any trees or bushes, it does have a small variety of lichens (small, low-lying shrubs).
Most penguin species are found in Antarctica where no trees grow.
No kinda of trees can grow in Antarctica.
No. No trees grow in Antarctica.
There are no trees in the AntArctic, plants can not grow unless they have liquid water available.
Trees and numerous other small plants are missing in Antarctica. For the most part, the Antarctic climate is much too cold and dry (and dark in the winter) for larger plants to survive.
Antarctica is polar: tropical plants grow in the tropics. There are no tropical plants in Antarctica.
There is oxygen in Antarctica, even without trees.