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Mohamed Abdel Raouf Mousa Elsheikh

Professor

Professor

Sciences
Building 5, Office AB 43
publication
Journal Article
2026

Crowdsourced biodiversity monitoring fills gaps in global plant trait mapping

Plant functional traits are fundamental to ecosystem dynamics and Earth system processes, but their global characterization is limited by available field surveys and trait measurements. Recent expansions in biodiversity data aggregation—including vegetation surveys, citizen science observations, and trait measurements—offer new opportunities to overcome these constraints. Here we demonstrate that combining these diverse data sources with high-resolution Earth observation data enables accurate modeling of key plant traits at up to 1 km2 resolution. Our approach achieves correlations up to 0.63 (15 of 31 traits exceeding 0.50) and improved spatial transferability, effectively bridging gaps in under-sampled regions. By capturing a broad range of traits with high spatial coverage, these maps can enhance understanding of plant community properties and ecosystem functioning, while serving as tools for modeling global biogeochemical processes and informing conservation efforts. Our framework highlights the power of crowdsourced biodiversity data in addressing longstanding extrapolation challenges in global plant trait modeling, with continued advancements in data collection and remote sensing poised to further refine trait-based understanding of the biosphere.

more of publication
publications

Groundwater-dependent vegetation (GDV) plays a vital role in maintaining biodiversity and ecosystem services in the Mediterranean biome but is increasingly threatened by climate and land use…

by Léonard El-Hokayem a c ⁎ , Gabriella Damasceno b c , Francesco M. Sabatini d , Helge Bruelheide b c , Gianmaria Bonari e f , Ciara Dwyer g , Fernando Gonçalves h , Borja Jiménez-Alfaro i j , Jonathan Millett k , Josep Peñuelas l m , Jens-Christi
2026
publications

Plant functional traits are fundamental to ecosystem dynamics and Earth system processes, but their global characterization is limited by available field surveys and trait measurements.

by Daniel Lusk, Sophie Wolf, Daria Svidzinska, Carsten F. Dormann, Jens Kattge, Helge Bruelheide, Francesco Maria Sabatini, Gabriella Damasceno, Álvaro Moreno Martínez, Cyrille Violle, Daniel Hending, Georg J. A. Hähn, Solana Tabeni, Shyam Phartyal, Fernando
2026
publications

Sabkhas, or salt marshes, are important wetland habitats that play a vital role in capturing and storing carbon. This research examines the capacity of six salt marshes to sequester…

by Al Rabiah H.K., El-Sheikh, M.A., Alatar, A.A., Alsaqaf, W.A., Pereira, P.
2025