"As we begin to piece together the damage from Hurricane Irma in Florida, scientists are pointing to an environmental factor that may have made the storm’s impact worse: the ongoing loss of coral on the state’s increasingly threatened barrier reef.
At 360 miles long, the Florida Reef Tract is the third-largest barrier reef in the world, stretching from the Florida Keys up to Martin County. But as Chris Mooney of The Washington Post reported just a few months ago, the reef is in big trouble — scientists estimate that less than 10 percent of it is covered with living coral, the result of a long history of damage that, most recently, includes warming waters and back-to-back bleaching events in recent years.
Now, scientists say these losses may have weakened the reef’s storm buffer."
Chelsea Harvey reports for the Washington Post September 12, 2017.
Damage To Florida’s Coral Reef Made It More Vulnerable To Storm Surges
Source: Washington Post, 09/14/2017