There is no food chain for land animals on Antarctica, because there are no land animals that live there.
Orcas do not live in Antarctica. Antarctica is a continent and orcas are marine animals. Orcas swim in the Southern Oceans that surround the Antarctic continent.
Seals live in oceans and in other oceans in addition to those that live in the Southern Ocean, which surrounds Antarctica. Seals are not land animals: Antarctica is a land mass.
There are no native animals in Antarctica. You could consider the humans who work and live on the continent on a temporary basis, land animals.
No. The temperature is too cold in Antarctica to support wild animals that must live on land.
No bears or land animals of any kind live on Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain.
All animals that visit Antarctica, do so to breed. Otherwise all animals live in the sea, including albatross. Breeding on Antarctica is a survival strategy because there are no land predators there, except other breeding adults that prey on newborns in order to feed the predators' young.
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polar bears and penguinsAnother AnswerNo animals live on Antarctica. Sea animals, however, to visit Antarctica beaches to breed, because there are no land predators on the continent. (There are no polar bears on Antarctica.)
peguines seals birds elk sea monster
The only frozen desert is Antarctica and it has few resident animals. The closest to a predator are the seals and sea lions that live in coastal areas but they feed in the ocean, not on land. Penguins also inhabit areas near the coast but they, also, feed in the sea and not on land.
in Antarctica