Elephants,Giraffes,Lions,Cheetahs, Monkeys, Flamingoes etc. can NOT survive in such harsh conditions. Animals such as e.g. the penguin, skua, krill and seal and lots more.
Another Answer
No animal lives on Antarctica, because it's too cold to support any food chain that contains prey for herbivores or carnivores. Animals that visit Antarctic's beaches do so because there are no land predators there. All breeding animals on Antarctica are sea animals that find their food chain in open water.
On mainland Antarctica, almost every animal apart from small insects. But you don't get Polar bears, Arctic foxes, Arctic hares, arctic terns, snowy owls and walruses like you do in the arctic, penguins live on.the islands around Antarctica
All penguins reside in the Southern Hemisphere. But most do not live in Antarctica. In fact, only two species actually live on the Antarctic coastline - the Emperor (those seen in "March of the Penguins") and the Adélie. -- There are penguins in and around Australia and New Zealand. You can find penguins in many areas along the tip of South Africa. And you can find penguins up and around the coast of South America and in the Galapagos Islands. -- Located on the equator, the Galapagos Islands are the warmest penguin home of all. With average temperatures of around 73 degrees Fahrenheit, it's a big difference from the average temperature in Antarctica, which is minus 58 degrees Fahrenheit! So, if you've ever been to the zoo, observed penguins in an area that didn't resemble a deep freezer and wondered if they're OK - they probably are. -- Off land, penguins are incredibly graceful - and fast. They can travel as fast as 11 to 15 miles per hour. Their shape, feet and wings make it all possible. -- Although penguins do not soar through the air, they do use their wings to fly. Fly through the water, that is. A penguin's wings are very different from those of other birds. In fact, they are really more like a seal's flippers. -- You can actually catch a glimpse of this grace among penguins on land. When in a snow-filled or icy environment, penguins will travel by tobogganing instead of walking. They flop down on their bellies and use their feet and wings to slide across the ice and snow. -- Penguins have one other big difference from air-bound birds. Birds that fly through the air have very light-weight skeletons because their bones are hollow. Penguins have heavier, denser bones which helps them dive deep for food. -- Because penguins need air, they can't stay submerged for too long. While traveling through the water, they intermittently soar up and out of the water to take a deep breath and dive again. This activity resembles what porpoises do, so it is called porpoising. When it's time to return to land, penguins again resemble humans by catching a wave and bodysurfing back to shore.
By Pro. M.SHOAIB BILAL
EMAIL: shoaibbilal64@yahoo.com
No animals live in Antarctica. However, some sea birds and sea mammals come to Antarctica's beaches to breed. These include two types of penguins, and Weddell seals.
It's too cold in Antarctica to support any kind of food chain for animals.
No animals actually live on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold to support any kind of animal life.
All animals do not live in Antarctica.
Polar bears
No animals are used for transport in Antarctica.
in Antarctica
There are no native animals in Antarctica.
Antarctica contains a variety of animals which are adapted to that particular environment.
No animals live in Antarctica.
No animals 'live' in Antarctica. Some sea animals, including sea birds, come to Antarctica's beaches to breed.
No animals are used for transport in Antarctica.
There are no animals that live in Antarctica.
None, no animals live in Antarctica.
There are no animals found in Antarctica.
There is no food chain for land animals on Antarctica, because there are no land animals that live there.
All animals in antarctica have fat deposit under their skin.