If you mean at the geographic (as opposed to the magnetic) North Pole, animals are members of food webs such as: polar bears eat seals, seals eat fish, fish eat crustacia or algae, crustacia, eat algae, algae are autotrophs consuming carbon dioxide, water, and light (often through the ice).
No, there are no snakes in the North Pole. It is too cold, and being cold-blooded, snakes rely on the environment to maintain their body temperature. They could not survive the North Pole's climate.
You could, it would be expensive and the animals you move would not survive. Antarctica is too cold to support life, and there is no food chain there.
Cacti are not suited to survive in the extreme cold temperatures and lack of sunlight in the North Pole. They are adapted to thrive in hot, arid environments and would not be able to survive in the icy conditions of the North Pole.
Polar Bears live in the North pole, but penguins don't.Penguins live in the south pole. Not many insects can survive at those temperatures, but there is one tiny insect that can survive at the south pole.
Bald Eagles do not live at either pole. No animals live in Antarctica (South Pole). There is no land at the North Pole (it is water, and ice) Bald Eagles DO live in Northern Canada, but not at the North Pole.
Very few animals live at the North Pole. Less than 0.01% of species.
Mammals that live in the North Pole include polar bears, Arctic foxes, and reindeer. In the South Pole, mammals like seals, penguins, and whales are found. These animals have adapted to survive in the extreme cold and harsh conditions of the polar regions.
Mostly for camouflage, both for the prey and hunter!Incidentally, there are no animals at the North Pole. The North Pole is a floating ice shelf incapable of supporting life; quite different to the Arctic, where there are many plants and animals.
Cows
Reindeer of course!!
He's fat .. Its body heat !
They survive by being so warm.