There are no animals that live in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain.
Some sea birds come to Antarctica's beaches to breed in the spring.
The Southern Ocean surrounding the continent -- which is liquid and therefore always warmer than the ambient air on the continent -- is home to many sea animals.
There are no animals that live in Antarctica.
No. There are no bears in Antarctica of any species.
no they don't they are not adapted and suited to the environment !
Eagles are not found in Antarctica. Eagles do live in all other regions around the world. There are close to 60 species of eagles. There are two species that live in the North America.
Learn to live lightly on the land and you will help the entirety of the earth's environment, including Antarctica.
They were the only ones that could live there because there bodies adapted to the harsh environment that Antarctica provided.
Marine means sea or ocean -- salt water. Antarctica is a continent. No marine animals live on any continent.
The exact popluation of the penguins of Antarctica would be very hard to find. But surprisingly, only about two of seventeen species of penguins live there. They are the Adelie and Gentoo penguins, so, on the movie Happyfeet, they are inadequently wrong by showing the Rockhopper in the same environment as the others. Most species of penguins live in South America, Africa, Australia and New Zealand.
No. Squid generally live in warmer water, but there are some squid species that live in the Southern Oceans. Antarctica is a continent, and squid prefer life in the water.
The species you inquire about may exist with a different spelling, but not alive in Antarctica, because no animal lives there.
There are no animals that live permanently on the Antarctic continent.
The Woodpecker family has a species in every continent except Antarctica.