Antarctica has a few plants native to the area. 25 species of liverworts and 100 species of mosses can survive and grow in the area.
Note that only the Antarctic Peninsula -- a tiny portion of the continent which is as large as USA and Mexico combined -- is temperate enough for any botany to grow.
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
There are no tropical plants in Antarctica. Antarctica is a polar continent and essentially nothing grows there.
They don't
There are no trees in the AntArctic, plants can not grow unless they have liquid water available.
Fish in the Southern Ocean generally feast on krill and not on plants that grow on the continent.
None, it's too cold there for most trees and plants to grow.
Because so little Sun reaches frozen places, so they can't grow.
Most penguin species are found in Antarctica where no trees grow.
Plants grow on all five continents. The continent with the fewest plants is Antarctica, where vegetation consists largely of lichens, bryophytes, algae and fungi.
Its to cold to grow many things.Also no permanent residants live there so there is no need for agriculture.Some plants do grow, but maybe in the future, if we ever colonize antarctica,genetic engineering can make agriculture possible.
No, nothing can grow in Antarctica it is to cold.