No. Harp seals are native to the North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans.
it is true harp seals live in saltwater.
The Harp seal is a true seal. It has no ear flaps and uses its rear flippers for propulsion and its front flippers for steering. And most Artic seals are True seals.
lots. more than a million
What's true is that no animals live on the Antarctica, but that a few sea birds and aquatic mammals use the beaches in Antarctica for breeding.
The Scientific Name of the 'Weddell Seal' is Leptonychotes weddellii and belongs to a group of seals known as Phocidae - or true seals.~ hope this helped :)
=True seals=
No, polar bears and penguins live on opposite ends of the earth and do not share the same habitat. While polar bears primarily hunt seals for food in the Arctic, penguins are found in the Southern Hemisphere, mainly in Antarctica, where they are preyed upon by other animals like seals and birds.
There are no bears in Antarctica (polar bears live in the Arctic), and their are no true bears in Australia (Koala Bears are marsupials, and not really bears at all).
Yes, they do. Sea lions aren't actually true seals, and are adapted to movement on land slightly better than true seals are with hindquarters that are elevated and more easily moved by the sea lions.
They are found in coastal waters of the northern Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, as well as those of the Baltic and North Seas, making them the most widely distributed of the pinnipeds (walruses, eared seals, and true seals).
At sea, snow petrel eat mainly fish, some cephalopods (squid), other molluscs, and euphausiids. They also feed on seal placenta and the carcasses of dead seals, whales and penguins, and occasionally eat refuse on land.
made out of your heart seriously its true