Antarctica has no fixed population, no own industry and no farming. People there mainly eat whatever it is that they have brought with them.
they eat seals
The only living people residing in Antarctica are scientists and they mainly eat seafoodAnother AnswerPeople who live and work temporarily in Antarctica, including scientists, eat food that is imported from their home country, or food acquired in countries near Antarctica. Diets are constructed from available resources.There are no native peoples or permanent population on the continent, so the term "Antarcticans" is a misnomer.
All food consumed on Antarctica is imported by the country that supports the individual research station. Food, then, is typically what the scientist would eat in his/her home country. Exceptions are produce that scientists grow in hydroponic labs for consumption there. These include lettuce, tomato, spices and edible flowers.
Foodstuffs are imported by each government that supports a research station. Scientists eat whatever the government has imported, either in cafeterias or in field camps, depending on where they are working. Usually scientists eat food while living in Antarctica, brought in by supply ships and cooked by chefs, all in support of science. Varies with their native countries. All nations have had or have expeditions there so they eat similar things that they do at home.
There are no spiders on Antarctica: there's no food chain for them there.
food and their thumbs
There are no native people in Antarctica.
Scientists who work and live in Antarctica temporarily sleep in dorms or tents, eat in cafeterias or cafe tents and work in work spaces or in the field, depending on the nature of their investigation.
Scientists working in a research station sleep in dormitories and eat in cafeterias. Scientists working in field camps sleep in tents and eat in mess tents.
Antarctica is uninhabited; it has no staple food, at least for people. Penguins who live there eat fish.
Dry food or supplement.
Any fungi in Antarctica must be classified as a micro-organism, because the continent is so inhospitable to growing -- anything. No humans on Antarctica -- all temporary workers or scientists -- eat these fungi.
they eat seal meat if they don't have enough food