There are no trees, shrubs or plants in the Antarctic, firstly it is too cold (all year round), secondly there is actually very little rain (only blowing ice crystals), this makes the Antarctic the largest recognised desert in the world
Trees.
yes, there were trees in Antarctica before almost 200 million years ago when dinosaurs were existed
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.
There are several types of trees that grow in Greece. A few of the trees are the olive tree, plum tree, juniperus excelsa, and the pinus nigra.
There are no tropical plants in Antarctica. Antarctica is a polar continent and essentially nothing grows there.
There are no trees in Antarctica.
There are no trees in Antarctica.
No. No trees grow in Antarctica.
No kinda of trees can grow in Antarctica.
Antarctica doesn't have the resources to provide enough nutrients for trees. Small shrubs thrive there better than trees.
No trees grow in Antarctica.
In Antarctica it is.
Most penguin species are found in Antarctica where no trees grow.
Two types of grasses grow on the western side of the Antarctic Peninsula, otherwise there is no botany on the continent. Ninety-eight percent of Antarctica is covered with a permanent ice sheet.
Currently there are no trees growing in antarctica, it is just too cold. However millions of years ago antarctica was a vast, lush forest.
There are no flowers or trees on Antarctica. There are two tiny grasses that can grow on places on the Antarctic Peninsula. Elsewhere on the continent -- 98% of which is covered with an ice sheet -- there are no flora.
None, it's too cold there for most trees and plants to grow.