Anywhere on earth, this animal is classified as a mammal.
Please note that no animal lives in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain. Several marine birds and marine mammals come to its beaches to breed, however,
A mammal .
anteater
human being and elephants
A very young squirrel's mother feeds it with her milk.
tertiary consumer  noun Ecology . a carnivore at the topmost level in a food chain that feeds on other carnivores; an animal that feeds only on secondary consumers.
an animal without a backbone and a vertebrate is and animal without a back bone
No animal lives on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain. Sea mammals, including seals and whales visit Antarctica's beaches. Their food chain is at sea, where they live.
No such mammal lives on the Antarctic continent. Sea leopards and whales may fit your description, and their habitat is the Southern Ocean.
Weddell seals and Leopard seals both birth live young and suckle them. These animals are not native to Antarctica no animal is (except for Penguins) but they come to the continent for the birth and nurturing season, to raise their pups to survival age.
There is not a sea animal that breast feeds. A duck has to give birth in the water but does not breast feed.
Humans
A cow
The definition of a mammal is an animal that gives birth to live young and feeds them milk
The definition of a mammal is an animal that gives birth to live young and feeds them milk
This sort of animal that feeds on carrion is called a "scavenger".
No. The Pacific Ocean feeds the Southern Ocean, which surrounds Antarctica.
It all starts like this.... A female animal and a male animal has a baby then the baby feeds on the mother then they are separated then the baby grows up to an adult and then it starts all over again...
This has something to do with the way its feeds