User:Adrian J. Hunter/sandbox

= Trees For Life (Australia) =

Trees For Life is a registered charity that protects and restores bushland, farm land and urban terrain in South Australia.

Activities
Volunteers grow Australian native plants including trees, shrubs and grasses, and are matched with landholders and farmers willing to plant them to revegetate their properties. There are around 500 such volunteers as of 2020. Seeds are collected from 42 zones around South Australia and labelled to facilitate maintenance of genetic diversity. Plantations may expand remnants of native vegetation, as well as creating new forests, forming windbreaks and controlling erosion.

History
Trees For Life was established in 1981 two weeks after a visit from the founder of the international environmental organisation Men of the Trees, now known as the International Tree Foundation. It was originally the South Australian branch of Men of the Trees, and became Trees For Life two years later. The first tree was planted in 1982 at One Tree Hill.

By 2001, Trees For Life was one of the largest volunteer producers of native seedlings in the world, having grown 20 million seedlings; 1.5 million small trees were being grown by almost 2000 volunteers each year. 201 species were being grown including melaleucas, acacias, she-oaks, and all major eucalypts. Over half the species were understory plants such as shrubs and ground covers.

Trees For Life was granted registered charity status on 3 December 2012.

In 2018, Trees For Life had sustained a 30 percent reduction in federal government funding from the Natural Heritage Trust via the National Landcare Program, and state government funding had also been reduced. This threatened projects such as the Paddock Trees Project which, in partnership with the Adelaide and Mt Lofty Natural Resources Management Board and under advice from ornithologists, was revegetating land from Strathalbyn to Gawler.

In 2020, it was announced that Trees For Life will co-ordinate and deliver all 6,500 tree plantings of the A$1.2 million Bushfire Recovery Paddock Tree Project. This would restore areas of the Adelaide Hills damaged by bushfire in December 2019, providing habitat for the brown treecreeper and diamond firetail birds, as well as benefiting agriculture. Also in 2020, it was announced that Trees For Life would be a partner in a $3 million Revitalising Private Conservation in South Australia program, which provides grants to landholders with a Heritage Agreement.