floried dioxihed, moss , holy strins, and red flora
Visible plant life in Antarctica can be seen mostly on the Antarctic Peninsula.
Antarctica is not known for plant life, whatever the season.
no
Very little precipitation or plant life. -apex
There is no plant life on the continent where you find the South Pole. The only plant life on Antarctica is around the coastal areas. There are microscopic single cell plants called phytoplankton that live and multiply in water, and mosses, lichens and algae that can live in the extreme cold of the continent.
There is no plant life at the South Pole. The only plant life on Antarctica is around the coastal areas. There are microscopic single cell plants called phytoplankton that live and multiply in water, and mosses, lichens and algae that can live under the snow and ice.
Bees need a food source (pollen) that is not freely available in Antarctica. Also they would not be able to survive in the climate in Antarctica due to the low temperature.
No trees grow on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold to support plant -- or animal -- life.
Yes, there are plants in cold deserts. However, in Antarctica there is very limited plant life.
However, the oceans adjoining Antarctica teem up with life,it has been a cold and a forbiding land that has had no parmanent human population and settlement, has had unusual political history and is almost devoid of animal or plant life.
Yes there is an edible plant in Antarctica. The sub-Antarctic edible plant is known as Kerguelen Cabbage.
Antarctica is the highest, driest, coldest, darkest, windiest and iciest continent on earth.