Whales are sea-dwelling mammals: Antarctica is a continent -- land.
Several species of whales enjoy the foods available in the high productivity of the Southern Ocean that surrounds the Antarctic continent, including Minke, Blue, Humpback.
You can review a complete list here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antarctic_whales
yes,many species of whales live in coral reefs through out the globe.
4 or 5
No. There are many species of whales and they are in all sorts of waters. Many migrate as well to breed or find food.
Just the one species, and they are whales
Seventy-eight.
Most whales are always moving, they don't live in just one place. However, many species of whale have been reported in the Great Barrier Reef. The ones I know about are humpback whales and dwarf minke whales that pass through it every year.
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.
Maybe 15?
Not really though many animals such as fish live near whales.
Blue whales live in all levels of ocean
All species of whale can be broken down into two subcategories which include baleen whales and toothed whales. If you combine whales with dolphins and porpoises there are currently around 80 different species of whale in existence today.If you exclude dolphins and porpoises then the number is closer to 30 - 40 different whale species.
find out how many people live there