i guess that they adapt to the climate
No animals live in Antarctica: it's too cold to support any kind of food chain to support animal life.
Since there is no food chain in Antarctica, it's too cold, there are no animals that live there. Sea animals eat other sea animals in the shortest food chain on earth.
It's too cold in Antarctica for cold germs to survive.
Many animals survive in the waters around Antarctica: the continent itself is too cold to support any life.
you must have a strong immune system and very fit.
All animals in Antarctica -- those that come to the continent to breed -- feed in the sea. Exceptions are made when carnivorous animals find baby animals unattended on the ice, in which case the babies provide food. There is no food chain in Antarctica: it's too cold.
they have blubber and thick fur.but sometimes they still get cold
no. its way to cold.
It's too cold for tundra in Antarctica; there are no plants that can survive the cold to develop into tundra.
They survive because their body's were built to survive the coldAnother AnswerNothing lives in Antarctica; it's too cold. So, nothing 'survives' in Antarctica.Many animals, including penguins, seals, skuas and petrels, come to Antarctica to breed. As soon as their young are able, all the animals leave Antarctica.The breeding animals are equipped to deal with the extreme cold weather, and the rising sun and lack of sunsets later in the spring and summer, aid in animals' ability to breed on Antarctica's beaches and in Antarctic waters.
Hibernation is a natural phenomenon practiced by animals that live on other continents, not Antarctica. No animals live on the continent of Antarctica, because it's too cold and there is no food chain.
Snakes, and in fact all reptiles, are cold blooded. This means they can't independently increase or decrease their body temperature and need an external source (the sun, for example) to do so. This means Antarctica, with its polar climate, is way too cold for them to survive in. If they did live in Antarctica their blood would freeze up almost instantly. Also, there isn't a stable food source for snakes to survive on in Antarctica. This is why you won't find snakes, or indeed any type of reptile, in Antarctica.