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sue4e3

(752 posts)
Thu Oct 23, 2025, 05:20 PM Thursday

Catastrophic loss of Florida's staghorn and elkhorn corals highlights accelerating climate pressures for reefs worldwide

https://phys.org/news/2025-10-catastrophic-loss-florida-staghorn-elkhorn.html
New research reports the functional extinction of Acropora corals from Florida's Coral Reef. Scientists have documented catastrophic mortality of these critically endangered corals following a record-setting marine heat wave in 2023 that marked the ninth mass bleaching event for the region.

Both Acropora coral species—staghorn (Acropora cervicornis) and elkhorn (Acropora palmata)—are important reef-builders in Florida and the Caribbean and have been a major focus of recent coral restoration efforts.
The study is published in the journal Science. Led by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Coral Reef Watch and Chicago's Shedd Aquarium, the study involved 47 authors representing 22 institutions that contributed data detailing the coral die-off.

While some individual elkhorn and staghorn corals remain, their numbers are now so low that they can no longer fulfill their vital roles in the ecosystem—providing habitat for marine life and helping protect coastlines. This collapse of ecological function marks what scientists call a functional extinction, a stage that often precedes global extinction or the complete disappearance of species.
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Catastrophic loss of Florida's staghorn and elkhorn corals highlights accelerating climate pressures for reefs worldwide (Original Post) sue4e3 Thursday OP
We are fiddling while the planet burns Easterncedar Thursday #1
Lived in the Florida Keys as a kid in early 70's Hey Joe Thursday #2

Hey Joe

(276 posts)
2. Lived in the Florida Keys as a kid in early 70's
Thu Oct 23, 2025, 07:05 PM
Thursday

Went snorkeling and spearfishing and enjoyed the beautiful corals and plentiful fish, crab and lobster. Makes me so sad to see how we have willfully ruined our planet and its inhabitants.
All due to greed.
We won’t get it back again. Present and future generations will have to make do with the old photographs .

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