Any animal you find on the Antarctic continent visits its beaches to breed. Otherwise, no animals exist on the Antarctic continent.
Pandas!
You will only find animals on or near Antarctica's beaches during breeding season -- no animals live on the continent.
The Koala (Phascolarctos cinereus) is a marsupial mammal (not a bear). It is endemic to the continent of Australia, meaning that it is not found on any other continent or island group.
New Zealand is not located on a continent but is associated with the group of Australia New Zealand and Oceania (Australia is the only one being an actual continent, Oceania is a group of island nations and territories in the Pacific, New Zealand is an island nation)
No. It's too cold. Nothing edible by humans or animals grows on the Antarctic continent.
Whale sharks are marine animals and do not live on continents but in the oceans which surround the continents.
There are no animals that live on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain. However, several sea birds and sea mammals come to Antarctica's beaches to breed. You can also find these animals at sea.
All animals around the Antarctic continent have only one purpose for coming to land: to breed, and fledge their young. Otherwise, these animals live at sea where they find their food chain.
One would find Bushmen primarily in southern Africa, specifically in countries like Botswana, Namibia, and South Africa. They are indigenous hunter-gatherer societies known for their unique cultural practices and deep connection to the land.
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.
The European Continent