Not likely. In order to keep your body warm, you need energy supplied by food.
No, the dugongs require warmer water and could not survive in the bitter cold of Antarctica.
Anywhere on Earth, in order to survive, a human requires body warmth, water and food, and generally in that priority order. In Antarctica, dressed in your finest Mediterranean garb, you could withstand hypothermia for about 15 minutes, you could survive a day, maybe two without water and several more days without food, depending on your body's fat stores.
Orca are sea animals and survive in water -- anywhere they in the world.
They don't. Antarctica is a land mass and fish need water to be able to breathe.
You're thinking of ice.
You could survive in either desert, given the appropriate supplies, clothing and transport.
by drinking plenty of water
Antarctica is a continent covered in ice, which as you may know is frozen water, also known as H2O. You could therefore say that Antarctica consists of water, but you could not say that water consists of Antarctica. Water consists of hydrogen and oxygen.
Seals are marine mammals and do not live 'in Antarctica': Antarctica is a continent. Seals survive in their natural habitat, water, which surrounds Antarctica in the form of the Southern Ocean.
Because water lily is an aquatic plant and it requires plenty of water for its survival.
No human can remain viable anywhere on earth after about three days with no water. Unprepared, in Antarctica you can freeze to death within a few hours, with or without water.
No. You can melt ice or desalinate sea water to obtain sufficient drinking water.