No: polar bears live in the northern Arctic regions, not in the south at the Antarctic. There are no polar bears in Antarctica.
No. They are only found in the Arctic.
No
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No. Polar bears do not live in Antarctica at all. They live in the Artic. Penguins inhabit much of Antarctica, but there is no chance of a penguin encountering a polar bear in the wild. Polar bears are native to areas such as Canada's Northern Territories, Alaska, and other such areas.
It is too cold in Antarctica and there for there are no polar bears.
Not likely. Polar bears rely heavily on seals, which are not as common there as they are in the Arctic. Although there are thousands of penguins, they could not sustain a polar bear population for long.
Most of Antarctica is to cold for even a polar bear. Its a frozen wasteland where no living thing can survive (except maybe bacteria). The coasts are alittle bit warmer, however, so a polar bear could probably inhabit those areas.
But there is limited space and food, so in the long term, they would probably die out.
Well, they possibly COULD, but they don't. They live near the North Pole in the Arctic where they have adapted to the environment and available food sources.
No, polar bears are only found in the Arctic areas (north), never in Antarctica.