There are no tropical plants in Antarctica. Antarctica is a polar continent and essentially nothing grows there.
During the Cretaceous Period, Antarctica was covered with forests and was for a period of time, tropical. The continent gradually drifted southward to its present position over the south polar region.
Fossils of tropical plants and animals would be least likely found in Antarctica, as the continent's climate and environment are not conducive to supporting such organisms.
Allamanda plants grow in tropical and subtropical regions, primarily in South America and the Caribbean. They require warm temperatures and plenty of sunlight to thrive. Allamandas are commonly cultivated as ornamental plants in gardens and landscapes.
Vanilla plants primarily grow in tropical regions such as Madagascar, Mexico, Tahiti, and Indonesia. They require a warm climate with consistent temperatures and high humidity to thrive. These plants are typically cultivated on trellises or shade structures to protect them from direct sunlight.
Lichen, Algae, Seaweed, Fur grass, Moss, Liverwort, Pearl-wort. Antarctica has only two species of flowering plants. Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica) and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis) are found on the South Orkney Islands, the South Shetland Islands, and along the western Antarctic Peninsula. Moss, Linchen, Grass, Algae and Fungi.
Antarctica is polar: tropical plants grow in the tropics. There are no tropical plants in Antarctica.
Well, lichens, mosses, and algaes are one of them, though, not many plants grow in antarctica
They don't
they are easier to grow in tropical rain forests
Tropical plants
tropical
the plant kind
The amount of rain that falls can affect the type of plants that grow called vegetation. A couple of examples of vegetation are tropical forests and tropical plants.
Trees, moss, vines
no idea. haha
flying pigs
flying pigs