No, Antarctica has no animal life in the actual interior of the continent. It has limited animal life on the margine of the continent along the coastline.
Yes, there are plants in cold deserts. However, in Antarctica there is very limited plant life.
Antarctica does not contain any savannas. It is a cold, arid continent covered mostly by ice and snow, with very limited plant life.
There is no native human life there.
we can conserve animal life in Antarctica by not killing animals
Antarctica is known as the treeless continent, as it has very few trees due to its extreme cold and dry conditions. The Antarctic landscape is mainly covered by ice and snow, with very limited plant life.
Antarctica does not contain savannas as it is a polar region with extreme cold temperatures and limited vegetation.
Visible plant life in Antarctica can be seen mostly on the Antarctic Peninsula.
You find the most life around Antarctica in the great Southern Ocean in the form of marine life. The continent is too cold to support any kind of animal life.
The Southern Ocean that surrounds Antarctica has the most marine life. There is no marine life on the continent, unless you consider penguins in your marine life list -- they come to Antarctica's beaches to breed.
No marine life live on Antarctica: marine life lives in open water. However, marine birds and marine mammals do visit Antarctica's beaches to breed.
Flowering plants (Angiosperm and gymnosperms) are found on almost every continent of the world. The only exception is Antarctica, where only limited plant life is found