But aren't they actively destroying possibly good content by doing that? Even if the answer didn't get accepted, it could still be helpful for future readers.
If they are deleting unaccepted answers, then: yes, they could be removing good content. The accepted answer is the best answer for the OP, but that isn't the only person we care about - this is why you get rep for upvotes on answers irrespective of whether they're accepted.
However, most of the time when a user reaches his daily rate limit (see below), it's users pruning old or duplicate answers.
Why would someone find acceptance rate so important?
I have no idea! If they've deleted unaccepted answers with upvotes, it's actually costing them rep. to keep their acceptance rate up.
Should something be done against this?
No, I don't think so. For one thing, there's only three users with 20 or more answers at 100% (who could have got there without deleting anything, remember), and the acceptance rate seems to drop off pretty quickly. There are already limits to prevent users deleting too many of their answers:
- A maximum of five answers per day can be deleted;
- Every time a user hits this daily limit, a flag is automatically generated so mods can look into it and determine if any action needs to be taken;
- Mods do warn users about deleting good content if they are found to be systematically deleting answers with more than a few upvotesMods do warn users about deleting good content if they are found to be systematically deleting answers with more than a few upvotes; and
- There are disincentives to discourage the behaviour (losing rep if your answer had upvotes).
If an individual user decides they're happy with that trade-off, I think that's fair enough, and it doesn't seem to be a particularly large problem.
That said, if there are individual cases where an unaccepted but valuable answer is deleted by its author, I think that should be brought up, either by flagging for mod attention or on Meta - we don't want to lose good content, and it can be dissociated from the author's account if they really don't want it in their answer list.