This plant is not part of any food chain.
the food chain in Antarctica is a picture showing what animal eats what for example the killer whale eats krill.
polar bears
A Polar Bear eats harp and hooded seals, and will eat young walruses.
only after it eats a burrito that's when it most feels gassy
No such thing. No mammals live in Antarctica. The Artic fox eats small animals- birds, rabbits, etc.
Nothing on the Antarctic continent eats plants. The plants are sparse, and lack substantive nutrition, plus no consumer lives on the continent.
Yes, the Antarctica Cod eats Krill, just like the Blue Whales.
is a pink lemar from Antarctica that lives under the Egyptian pyramid in Paris France
Whales, seals and penguins generally feed in this food chain.
Liverwort are small, from 2-20 millimeters -- 0.08- 0.8 inches -- wide. Individual plants may grow to 10 centimeters -- 4 inches, but not in Antarctica. Liverwort in Antarctica are not part of any food chain.
Giraffes are a warm-weather animal that eats leaves from warm-weather plants. So, the answer is "no".
It eats krill and provides food for leapord seals and killer whales. (those are its predators)