All year round. the leopard seal stay within the antarctic regions all year round feeding on penguins, fish and other sea birds.
whales migrate there and seals live there year-round
No animals live there year round. Seals and whales are visitors, as are penguins and several sea birds.
The only mammal that can survive in Antarctica all year is a human mammal.
It seems like the season of what year-round in Antarctica?
hundred of thousands each year
It is cold there year-round.
No animals live on the Antarctic continent, however sea birds and sea mammals come to its beaches for a few weeks each year to breed.
Antarctica has a population of year round residents of: Zero ( 0 ) No one lives year round in Antarctica.Scientists (and others ) of various disciplines, travel there for study periodically through the year.
No. Traffic to and from Antarctica is limited to seasons when there is no ice surrounding the continent -- for ships, and when it is not so cold as to freeze fuel and hydraulic systems in aircraft.
Penguins that live in the oceans surrounding Antarctica reproduce once a year. Depending on the type of penguin, they may lay one or two eggs. Other birds follow this same pattern. Seals and Sea Lions reproduce once a year.
Yes they can. The average worker does a summer deployment, but in some cases certain more experianced people are offered to do a winter. In that case the person does live in Antarctica for a full year. Other stations like Vostok, the Russian station has had people stay on continent for well over a year.
Every animal that breeds in Antarctica -- including some flight birds, some penguins and some seals -- do so at the edges of the continent, because it is the closest land to where these animals 'live' during the rest of the year -- which is not on the Antarctic continent.