Yes
Antarctica is too cold and dry for agriculture or for growing anything. Within a few hours, the cactus would freeze.
The only plants in Antarctica are a few small shrubs of grass. Research shows that Antarctica used to be warm and blooming with plants of all kinds before it drifted south.
NO. A desert is any place that is too dry for plants to grow. Some deserts are cold most of the year.
Antarctica is known as the treeless continent, as it has very few trees due to its extreme cold and dry conditions. The Antarctic landscape is mainly covered by ice and snow, with very limited plant life.
There are no land animals and only a few mosses and grasses that grow on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold there to support any kind of life.
There are no plants or animals that live in Antarctica, except for a few hardy grasses, which can grow in the warmer summer months, especially on the Antarctic peninsula. For animals that live in the Antarctic regions, see the related question. Note that no animals live on the Antarctic continent.
A dry area where few plants grow is called a desert.
Ice and fungus under your toes and maybe a few dandelions
No animals live in Antarctica. Humans go to Antarctica as scientists, in support of science or as tourists. There is no native population there. Why? It's too cold in Antarctica to support life.
None. It's too cold for plants with foliage to grow on the continent. The Antarctic Peninsula does grow a few grasses, mosses and algae, but there are no trees or other botanical assets anywhere on the continent.
Being in Antarctica -- the most extreme environment on earth -- is at least bracing, and because of its cold, it feels cold. In winter, you would not feel much of anything after a few seconds unless you were warmly bundled in the numbing cold.
nothey do not live in AntarcticaIt would be way to cold for anyone to live on Antarctica.Only scientists and biologists etc go to Antarctica and they don't even live there they only spend a few months in Antarctica.