The idea of extinction — the permanent loss of life — is frightening. Yet the stakes of losing plants and animals are often unclear. If an already-rare bird vanishes from the forest, most people probably won’t feel the impact.

But a troubling situation unfolding in Florida is different. Following a record-shattering heat wave in 2023, two marine species are now nearly extinct in the state — and the impact of that loss on human life will likely be felt for generations.

In a new study published this week in Science, researchers found that elkhorn and staghorn corals — two species once fundamental to the structure of Florida’s reef — are now “functionally extinct” in the state. That means these animals are so rare that they no longer serve a function in Florida’s marine ecosystem.

Why extr

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