No plants, but animals, yes: you will find much more marine life beneath these ice-caps than above them. Seals, walruses and polar bears (Arctic) and penguins (Antarctic) are found above these polar ice caps.
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.
No animals live permanently on the Antarctic continent or in its polar ice cap.
an example of this would be like... the relationship between a carribou and the vegetation. The carribou eats the vegetation, and the carribou's waste provides fertilizer for the plants.
yes polar ice caps are freshwater
no, they don't live in polar ice caps.
Mars, Earth, and Pluto have polar ice caps. Mars' polar ice caps are primarily made of water and carbon dioxide ice, Earth's polar ice caps are primarily made of frozen water, and Pluto's polar ice caps are a mixture of methane and nitrogen ice.
Animals, people living in polar ice caps, Ect.
none the climate is way to cold for plants to survive the cold weather
Global warming is causing polar ice caps to melt at an accelerated rate, leading to rising sea levels and loss of habitat for polar animals such as polar bears and penguins. The melting ice caps also contribute to further warming as the reflective surface is replaced by dark ocean water that absorbs more heat from the sun.
No, nothing grows on ice caps.
No plant can grow on the polar icecaps as it is made of ice and has no soil, not to mention the extreme cold.
Various animals will be affected when polar ice caps melt, including polar bears, seals, walrus, penguins, and Arctic birds. These animals rely on the ice for hunting, breeding, and resting, and the melting ice threatens their habitats and food sources. Additionally, some fish species that depend on cold water may also be impacted.