The Antarctic region is home to penguins, skuas, albatross, terns and more. All of these animals can be found in the Southern Ocean, which surrounds the Antarctic continent.
All animal life in the Antarctic region lives in sea water. The Antarctic continent -- Antarctica -- is too cold to support life, and there is no food chain on the land.
"When taking a trip on an Antarctic Cruise these are some of the popular travel destinations: the Antarctic Peninsula, the Weddell Sea, and the Ross Sea region."
Penguins and other bird species and seals or sea lions inhabit primarily coastal areas of the Antarctic.
Penguins primarily live in the Antarctic region, although some species can also be found in parts of the Southern Hemisphere like New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa. Penguins do not inhabit the Arctic region.
Humpback Whales are sea mammals and exist in sea water. The Southern Ocean serves as their home in the Antarctic region.
they are called sea birds
No animal 'lives' in Antarctica. However, many sea birds and sea mammals visit the continent's beaches to breed. There are no cold-blooded animals that thrive in the Antarctic region.
No. No animal lives on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain. Albatross are among the sea birds that breed in the Antarctic region, including the sub-Antarctic islands off South America and off New Zealand, but none on the continent itself.
No penguin lives on the Antarctic continent. Macaroni penguins breed on the sub-Antarctic islands, and otherwise live at sea because they are sea birds..
The penguin is the only bird that lives permanently in the Antarctic region. It is also flightless.There are four species of penguins which live at Antarctica: Adelie, Emperor, Chinstrap and Gentoo penguins.
No animal or bird lives on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain. There are sea birds, including penguins and albatross, that visit Antarctica's beaches to breed.
The Gentoo penguin is a sea bird and lives at sea.However, according to Wikipedia, its breeding ground does include the Antarctic Peninsula. Otherwise, they breed on the sub-Antarctic islands.No animal lives on the Antarctic continent; it's too cold and there is no food chain there.Gentoo penguins breed on the northern-most beaches of the Antarctic Peninsula. Their food chain is in the sea and that's where they 'live'.