No.
There was a time when huskies were imported as working dogs. This practice is no longer allowed, because the dogs tend to terrorize breeding animals and can transmit diseases to the breeding animals.
No. They are brought by humans.
No one lives in antarctica permanently. All you get there are a couple of research stations.
Scientists discovered that diseases carried by the huskies could be transmitted to the seals that visit Antarctica's beaches to breed.
1991
Well the Siberian Huskies are originally from Siberia. * I think there are no land animals native to Antarctica only birds and marine animals.
There are no huskies, nor are there any animals native to the Antarctic continent.
There are no wild packs of huskies roaming the antarctic, but you might find some being kept as sled dogs at any of the research stations that humans ahve set up out there.
People From Antarctica , Polar North , and other places that have snow in them everyday use huskies.
There is no animal known as 'Antarctic Wolf'. There is an Arctic wolf that lives in the northern hemisphere.
After Douglas Mawson, Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott went to Antarctica
Huskies are no longer allowed on the Antarctic continent and have not been allowed for more than 20 years. Working dogs that worked in Antarctica were generally fed high-quality protein.
Because huskies pulles the sledges that they used to get around in. And they were also used for hunting down animals for their owners.
Early explorers between 1898 and 1922 brought dogs to Antarctica. The practice is now forbidden.