Antarctica is a continent: Jellyfish are marine animals. The Southern Ocean is home to Diplulmaris antarctica,a species of jellyfish in the family Ulmaridae. The ocean surrounds the continent.
yes
The box jellyfish survives with its venomous stinging cells
the jellyfish migrate to Antarcticathe jellyfish migrate to Antarctica
No. Nothing survives in Antarctica. It's too cold.
Japanese Crested Ibis is extinct
An Orange Striped Jelly fish survives the estuary zone the same way it survives the other zones. It floats and keeps moving and eating what is available for it to eat.
This animal -- a midge -- survives on and stores trehalose, glucose, and erythritol, which is not sourced in humans.
The Weddell seal survives in Antarctic waters, since the liquid marine environment is its natural habitat.
No. There is not enough vegitation or enough people to have had any effect on what little vegetation survives on the Antarctic continent.
The babies are not protected. Many don't survive. The species survives by having sufficient numbers of offspring.
There is only one land-based creature in Antarctica, the Antarctic midge, Belgica antarctica. The animal measures 2-6 mm long. It survives in the warmest part of the continent, the Antarctic Peninsula.Otherwise, no animal lives on Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain.
Jellies are found in every ocean, from the surface to the deep sea.
There is no native animal that survives in Antarctica: it's too cold there to support any kind of food chain. However, humans -- with expensive logistical support from their governments, complete scientific research on the continent.