lots. more than a million
No seals live in Antarctica: it is a continent and seals are marine animals. Several types of seals enjoy the habitat of the Southern Ocean, which surrounds the Antarctic continent.
Leopard seals and Weddell seals are among the most common types you can find in those waters.
Antarctica is a continent and seals live in the ocean.
During breeding season, you can find Weddell Seals and Leopard Seals on Antarctica's beaches. In addition, you may find Antarctic Fur Seals, Crabeater Seals and Ross Seals.
All Southern Ocean seals are true seals; no eared seals or walrus exist in these cold waters.
None. Antarctica is a continent; sea creatures live in the sea.
The Southern Ocean that surrounds Antarctica, however, is the most productive sea on earth, in terms of total protein -- i.e., sea creatures.
There are six types of penguins in Antartica
Yes, Arctic seals are mammals. All seals are mammals.
lots. more than a million
Seals and Arctic wolves do not live in the same ecosystem. In the wild, Arctic wolves primarily prey on muskoxen and Arctic hares. They have also been found to prey on lemmings, Arctic foxes, birds and beetles.
- polar bear - Arctic fox - many migratory birds - mice - caribou - wolves - fish - seals - whales - humans
No, seals mostly prey on fish, not foxes.
Seals are mostly found in the arctic.
Polar Bear, Arctic Hare, Arctic fox, Seals, Walrus, Norway Lemming, Arctic Wolf, Snowy Owl, Gyrfalcon, Caribou, Musk Ox, and Rock Ptarmigan. Also the ermine, wolverine, and many others.
no
yes
Yes all seals eat a diet of fish.
Seals are native to Antarctica and the Southern Ocean. Seals are also found within the Arctic Circle, quite possibly in the waters of the North Pole. They are the main food of polar bears, which live in the Arctic Circle (near, but not on, the North Pole).
There are Arctic salmon, walruses, seals, killer whales, etc.