When you find yourself out in an Antarctic blizzard and unable to return to safety, your first concern is not for food, but for shelter.
If you can craft a shelter, or find one, the food you will eat is whatever you brought with you.
You can survive for about three days without water, and a little longer without food. However, ultimately, unless you are rescued, or the wind stops and you can find your way to shelter, you will eventually freeze to death, regardless of the food you brought.
There are a few grasses and mosses that survive on the Antarctic peninsula, but not enough vegetation to support any kind of food chain grows on the continent.
There is no wildlife in Antarctica: it's too cold to support any kind of food chain.
Krill are a key component of the Antarctic food web, serving as a primary food source for many species including whales, seals, and penguins. While they play a crucial role, they are not the dominant herbivores in the Antarctic ecosystem, as there are other herbivorous organisms like algae and small fish that also contribute to the food web.
None. It's too cold on the Antarctic continent to support life or any kind of food chain.
There are no animals on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold to support animal life or any kind of food chain.
Antarctic krill -- Euphasia superba -- form the base of the food chain in the Southern Ocean which surrounds Antarctica. All animals that make their homes in this ocean feast on krill.There are no land animals on Antarctica.
It is dehydrated food , as weight will be a problem. the food is very healthy with the meals like peanut butter, toast , tuna and frozen beverages.
Shrubs, twigs, bark and leaves. This keeps up thier energy and is thier main food and people.
No They would die cause some of the spiders need warmth
There are no animals that live on the Antarctic continent.
because there habitat is there and the food they eat but say if the cheetah lived in the UK it wouldn't survive because the food they need is not in the UK. kind of anyway.
Everywhere. In Africa, the Antarctic, and tropical islands!