There are about 24 billion standard trees in Australia. These trees have a trunk diameter of 30 centimetres and stand approximately 15 metres tall.
In second place is Canada with 318 billion trees. About 40% of the land is covered with trees, and this represents 30% of global forests. Spruce trees are among the most abundant in Canada. Brazil is in 3rd place with 302 billion trees.
Tampa, Florida has overtaken Singapore's tree count and has been ranked as the city with the most trees in the world. Researchers have calculated the amount of vegetation growing in major cities, with Tampa's percentage reaching 36% (tree cover over the city.)
Leafy subtropical Brisbane led the field, boasting the greenest populated suburbs of any Australian capital city. More than 79% of people in Greater Brisbane enjoy life in suburbs with total tree cover greater than 20%.
Russia is home to the largest area of forest – 815 million hectares. Brazil, the United States, Canada, China, Australia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo also have a largest forest area – more than 100 million hectares each.
According to the FAO, Nigeria has the world's highest deforestation rate of primary forests. It has lost more than half of its primary forest in the last five years.
Human-driven and natural loss of trees—deforestation—affects wildlife, ecosystems, weather patterns, and even the climate. Forests cover about 30 percent of the planet's land mass, but humans are cutting them down, clearing these essential habitats on a massive scale.
Arid today, Australia was once covered by lush forests, according to new research (Adobe Stock). For decades, paleobotanist David Greenwood has collected fossil plants from Australia – some so well preserved it's hard to believe they're millions of years old.
Australia is globally famous for its natural wonders, wide-open spaces, beaches, deserts, "The Bush", and "The Outback". Australia is one of the world's most highly urbanised countries; it's well known for its attractive mega cities such as Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth.
The Huon pine is Australia's oldest living tree and is one of the oldest living organisms on earth. Individuals have been known to reach an age of 3,000 years. Fossil records from a tree found in a boggy area in the south west of Tasmania were dated at 3,462 years! (Carder A., 1995).
Northern Anatolian city of Çorum broke the world record for the most trees planted at a single site in one hour – 303,150 saplings.
Publisher's Synopsis: Wangari Maathai received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004 for her efforts to lead women in a nonviolent struggle to bring peace and democracy to Africa through its reforestation. Her organization planted over thirty million trees in thirty years.
It is proposed that one large tree can provide a day's supply of oxygen for up to four people. Trees also store carbon dioxide in their fibers helping to clean the air and reduce the negative effects that this CO2 could have had on our environment.
Australia is one of the worst developed countries in the world for broadscale deforestation—killing tens of millions of native animals (including threatened species) and wiping out endangered forests and woodlands. In fact, we've cleared nearly half of our forest cover in the last 200 years!
Today, annual tree harvest vs. production on a worldwide scale shows that humans cut down approximately 15 billion trees a year and re-plant about 5 billion. That's a net loss of 10 billion trees every year, and a rate that would mean the loss of all trees within the next 300 years.
Norway's deforestation ban is a commitment to deforestation-free supply chains. It means that Norwegians will refuse to award government contracts to companies that engage in clear-cutting.
Brazil. It is the country with the greatest biodiversity of flora and fauna on the planet. Brazil has the highest number of species of known mammals and freshwater fish, and more than 50,000 species of trees and bushes, it takes first place in plant diversity.
This amounts to a billion new trees planted to produce more timber and wood-fibre. This target is in addition to the 70 million trees planted every year to replace those trees harvested in Australia's plantations.
Indiana County, PA is proud to be dubbed “The Christmas Tree Capital of the World”. Growing Christmas Trees as a farm crop in Indiana County started in 1918. In 1956, an estimated 700,000 trees in Indiana County were cut.