No animals live on Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain.
Sea mammals and sea birds visit Antarctica's beaches, because there are no land predators there.
penguins, orcas, seals, polar bears, walrus
The same types of animals that are vertebrates and invertebrates everywhere else.
There are no animals that live on the Antarctic continent.
No animals live on the Antarctic continent.
Antarctic
No animals live in Antarctica, even on the peninsula.
There are no animals on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold to support animal life or any kind of food chain.
There are no plants or animals that live in Antarctica, except for a few hardy grasses, which can grow in the warmer summer months, especially on the Antarctic peninsula. For animals that live in the Antarctic regions, see the related question. Note that no animals live on the Antarctic continent.
No animals live on the Antarctic continent. Some animals, such as penguins, come to the Antarctic beaches to breed.
Some animals are captured and used for research, and these animals are always marine animals. No land animals live on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold.
No animals live permanently on the Antarctic continent or in its polar ice cap.
Squids and the antarctic toothfish live in the waters of the antarctic penguins, seals, elephant seals, and many other.
No animals live on the Antarctic continent. Sea mammals and sea birds, however, populate the southern ocean that surrounds the continent.
They aren't in the South Pole because it is in the Antarctic where it is cold, where they can survive and live. So if they did live there they wouldn't live very long. Think about if you lived in the Antarctic as a polar bear but you were still you, you would freeze.Further information:In fact, there are no animals that live at the South Pole. Many people consider that the South Pole is the same as the Antarctic, but in fact the South Pole is just a theoretical point in Antarctica. This question will answer what creatures live in the Antarctic, as no animals actually live at the South Pole, being too far inland for any animals to survive there. The Antarctic itself is a desert, and no animals live in the Antarctic desert.