No animals live in Antarctica: it's too cold to maintain any kind of life or food chain.
Some marine animals and birds come to Antarctica to breed, otherwise, their locations are a mystery: scientists continue to study where these animals live the rest of the year.
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Hibernation is a natural phenomenon practiced by animals that live on other continents, not Antarctica. No animals live on the continent of Antarctica, because it's too cold and there is no food chain.
Animals survive in Antarctica by adapting to the harsh climate. There is not any claim life in Antarctica during the winter months.
Animals only visit Antarctica in order to breed on land. Otherwise they live in the sea. There is no food chain on the continent, and it is too cold to support life.
Most breeding animals -- none live there, but do breed there -- are gone by about February.
Seasons in Antarctica are Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter.
A pagwen in winter and a monark butterfly in summer
winter
Antarctica receives zero hours of daylight in the winter.
Cut down on the amount of ships that transport tourists there. Tourists keep feeding the animals in Antarctica and so the Artic animals aren't hunting for food themselves but relying on humans. This just shows that somehow we need to stop people visiting Antarctica and just leave the poor animals alone.
In the Southern Hemisphere, which includes Antarctica, winter begins on June 21.
The winter solstice in Antarctica occurred on June 21, 2009, also called 'mid-winter's day'.