None.
No animals are native to or live in Antarctica, although humans do go there to work in the pursuit of science.
Some sea animals, such as penguins and seals, come to the Antarctic continent to lay eggs, birth their pups and raise their young until survival age. Otherwise, these animals make their homes in the sea or on ice floes.
Last time I checked, Antarctica is a land mass. While whales are mammals, they live in the oceans. Simple geography fail.
Antarctica is a continent and whales are marine mammals. In the Southern Ocean that surrounds the continent, you can find whales described by the Australian Whale projects, below.
No animal lives on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain. Sea mammals and sea birds, however, to breed on Antarctica's beaches.
67 native species of mammals
Did you know...Seals can live in oceans as well as freshwater lakes, such as the Lake Baikal in Russia. However, most seals live in and around Antarctica and the Arctic Circle. Antarctica is so cold that it has no permanent land mammals, but six species of seals have found ways to live in the Antarctic Ocean. Many seals live in locations that are hard for humans to reach, such as Antarctica and the Arctic.
There are approximately 235 species of animals that inhabit Antarctica, including penguins, seals, whales, and numerous species of birds. The continent is also home to a variety of microorganisms and invertebrates that have adapted to the extreme cold conditions.
I think we should pretect Antarctica because it is home to many unique and valuable species of animals and mammals. If someone kills just one species in Antarctica, the entire food chain/food web will die. That is all the species in Antatctica!
None. No animal can survive on the Antarctic continent. Several sea birds and sea mammals come to Antarctica's beaches to breed, however.
Thousands. Madagascar has hundreds of species of lemur alone.
No animals live on the Antarctic continent.
No animals live on Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain there.
You can find sea birds and sea mammals breeding on Antarctica's beaches, and otherwise, no animals make Antarctica their home: it's too cold and there is no food chain.