All creatures travel to the Antarctic continent or the surrounding Southern Ocean to breed and feed.
As Antarctica covers the southernmost point on Earth, it is technically south of all parts of the planet, so if you travel south from any part of Europe you will eventually come to Antarctica, meaning it is south of Europe, not southeast of it.
Just about every continent other than antarctica.
No creature lives in Antarctica: it's too cold and there is no food chain. Exceptions could be tiny organisms that can survive in that extreme environment. However, several types of sea birds and sea mammals come to Antarctica's beaches to breed. These include penguins, skuas and seals.
No animals live on the Antarctic continent: it's too cold and there is no food chain. Sea mammals and sea birds do come to Antarctica's beaches to breed, however, and their diets are supported by the sea creatures in the Southern Ocean.
most monsters come out at night and other scary creatures.
Antarctica is its own continent.
Penguins are aquatic birds and use the Antarctic continent -- and other lands: New Zealand and Africa -- for breeding purposes. There are no countries in Antarctica.
Antarctica
Tourists visiting Antarctica are housed aboard the ships used to sail them to the continent. Tourists who charter private expeditions to the continent bring their own tents and other equipment for shelter from this extreme environment. There are no commercial tourist facilities on the continent.
Nothing lives in Antarctica. Penguins, skuas and seals and a few other animals come to the continent to breed and fledge their young. Then these animals return to the sea.
Animals that come to Antarctica's beaches to breed may compete with each other for food. There are, unfortunately, times when chicks and baby mammals become this food.
They come from the same 'place' that all other Living Creatures Genes come from - Three Billion Years of Biological Evolution.