No. Caribou live on the tundra, not the ice caps. There is no vegetation that caribou can eat on ice-caps, thus they are only able to live on the tundra.
no, they don't live in polar ice caps.
yes
Because our skins are not the same as some animals that can live on the ice caps, they were not designed to be in the coolest places or at least not in very cold places.
Reindeer and caribou live in the arctic, but they live on the land, they do not go out onto the Arctic ocean ice around the north pole, except for those who work for Santa of course...
Penguins and polar bearsAnother AnswerPolar ice caps provide resting places for animals. Food sources exist in surrounding oceans -- in Antarctica, and lands -- in the Arctic.No animals 'live' on polar ice caps.
Ice caps is two words, not one.Some example sentences are:Ice caps are masses of ice which cover a large area of land.The oceans will rise, causing global flooding, if the ice caps melt entirely.The Arctic ice caps are dangerously melting faster than anticipated.Ice caps are very cold.Many unique species of animals and microbes live in the ice caps.Further InformationIce caps on Wikipedia (click)Ice caps on National Geographic (click)
No animals live permanently on the Antarctic continent or in its polar ice cap.
ellworth land ice caps
people don't live on the polar ice cap but they do, do research on the caps.
No, nothing grows on ice caps.
Ice caps are made out of Carbon Dioxide on Mars.
No, Triton does not have ice caps. Instead, the entire surface of Triton is ice.