HABITATS IN THE POLAR AREAS are very chilly.

They develop at the Earth's highest latitudes, where they receive almost no solar radiation in the winter and very less in the summer. The existence of land and water is the primary distinction between the North and South Poles. The North Pole is a sea surrounded by land, while the South Pole is land. Huge penguin colonies can be seen along the coastlines of the South Pole, and leopard seals and whales can be seen near offshore. These creatures consume fish and the common krill, which are tiny crustaceans.

Plankton, tiny microscopic plants that live in the chilly, nutrient-rich seas, is what krill mostly consume. Small fish and crustaceans in the North Pole consume plankton.

The portion of the polar habitat known as TUNDRA, which is on land and not covered in ice, is primarily found in the north. In the summer, when the snow has melted, grassy meadows and tiny, quickly developing bushes can be seen. In the winter, the tundra appears lifeless and covered in snow. Trees have a too-short growth season.

Among the creatures that live on the tundra are wolves and reindeer.

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