Abdel-Tawab Mossa | Pesticides | Research Excellence Award

Prof. Dr. Abdel-Tawab Mossa | Pesticides | Research Excellence Award

Professor at National Research Centre, Egypt

Prof. Dr. Abdel-Tawab Mossa is a distinguished Egyptian scientist specializing in pesticide chemistry, toxicology, and environmental safety, with a PhD from Alexandria University and extensive academic, research, and leadership experience at the National Research Centre (NRC). He currently serves as Head of the Pesticide Chemistry Department at NRC and has held progressive academic ranks from Researcher to Professor, alongside long-standing teaching roles at Alexandria University. His research portfolio includes leading and contributing to numerous national and international projects focused on eco-friendly pesticides, nanotechnology, agricultural waste valorization, and health risk assessment. He has received multiple awards for scientific excellence and research output, holds granted patents, and has undertaken prestigious scientific missions across Europe, Asia, and Africa. Prof. Mossa has authored influential book chapters with global publishers and serves as a scientific consultant to agricultural and pest control industries. He has played key national roles in scientific governance, including coordinating the National Committee of Toxicology and leading the Permanent Scientific Committee for Agricultural Sciences for professor and assistant professor promotions since July 2023.

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Featured Publications

 

Dima Chen | Ecology | Research Excellence Award

Prof. Dr. Dima Chen | Ecology | Research Excellence Award

Professor at Inner Mongolia University, China

Prof. Dr. Dima Chen is a highly cited environmental and ecosystem scientist whose influential body of work spans plant diversity, soil ecology, biogeochemistry, and global change biology, contributing substantially to the understanding of how biodiversity, nutrient enrichment, and climate-related processes regulate terrestrial ecosystem functioning. With 100 published documents and an h-index of 37, supported by 5,858 citations from 4,899 citing documents, her research has produced landmark findings, including evidence that plant diversity significantly enhances productivity and soil carbon storage, as demonstrated in her widely cited PNAS article from 2018. She has advanced global understanding of microbial necromass dynamics, plant nutrient stoichiometry, and ecosystem productivity through high-impact publications in Nature Communications, PNAS, Ecology Letters, Functional Ecology, Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Geoderma, and Landscape Ecology. Her work has elucidated how nitrogen enrichment, soil acidification, and long-term nutrient inputs shape belowground communities, microbial stability, carbon cycling, and ecosystem resilience. She has revealed critical mechanisms showing that acidification-induced declines in plant diversity are mediated by below-ground community shifts, and demonstrated that soil acidification plays a stronger role than nitrogen availability in regulating soil respiration under long-term N enrichment. Her contributions also include uncovering the drivers of fungal functional group diversity on ecosystem stability, the long-term effects of continuous cropping on soil health, and the differential responses of soil bacteria to N and P additions. Through extensive collaborations, she has explored grazing legacy effects, precipitation gradients, and interactions between plants, microbes, and soil processes across diverse grassland ecosystems. Collectively, her research offers foundational insights into ecosystem stability, nutrient cycling, and soil biodiversity under global change pressures, establishing her as a leading authority in terrestrial biogeochemistry and ecological sustainability.

Profiles: Scopus | Orcid Google Scholar

Featured Publications

Xu, F., Li, J., Wu, L., Zhu, B., Chen, D., & Bai, Y. (2025). Grazing legacy mediates the diverse responses of grassland multidimensional stability to resource enrichment. Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment, 365, 109313. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.agee.2024.109313

Zhou, X., Liu, S., Wang, B., Wu, L., Wu, Y., Zhang, H., & Chen, D. (2025). Forest conversion-induced soil biota homogenization destabilizes ecosystem functions. Communications Earth & Environment, 6, Article 2909. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02909-7

Huang, J., Wang, S., Wu, Y., Lu, X., Bai, Y., Wang, B., & Chen, D. (2025). Monoculture-experiment evidence that plant species identity regulates soil biota attributes and soil functions. CATENA, 245, 109309. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2025.109309

Yu, J., Wu, L., Wu, Y., Wang, B., Chen, H., Bai, Y., & Chen, D. (2025). Nitrogen and phosphorus enrichment differentially affect grassland ecosystem functioning via multitrophic pathways. Journal of Ecology, 113, 70105. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.70105

Wang, B., Meng, Y., Deng, S., Zhou, X., Wang, S., Wu, Y., Wu, L., Bai, Y., & Chen, D. (2025). Biodiversity of soil biota and plants stabilises ecosystem multifunctionality with increasing number of global change factors. Journal of Ecology, 113, 70054. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.70054

Lu, X., Chen, D., Xing, W., Li, Y., Chen, X., Lou, N., Ding, J., & Bai, Y. (2025). Contrasting impacts of nitrogen enrichment on soil nematode diversity in natural and managed ecosystems. Journal of Applied Ecology, 62, 70072. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2664.70072

Mi, J., Wang, F., Shi, J., Wang, Q., Pang, H., Yu, J., Chen, D., & Bai, Y. (2025). Contrasting trends in plant diversity and soil carbon mineralization under precipitation‐driven vegetation and soil carbon dynamics in the Mongolian Plateau. Ecology and Evolution, 15, e71806. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71806

Zhang, H., Wang, B., Wu, Y., Wu, L., Yue, L., Bai, Y., & Chen, D. (2025). Plants and soil biota co‐regulate stability of ecosystem multifunctionality under multiple environmental changes. Ecology, 106(2), e4534. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.4534

Dr. Said Munir | Air Quality | Best Researcher Award

Dr. Said Munir | Air Quality | Best Researcher Award

National Center for Meteorology, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Dr. Said Munir is a seasoned Air Quality and Meteorology Expert at the National Center for Meteorology in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. With dual nationalities (British and Pakistani) and over 20 years of international experience, he has contributed significantly to the fields of air quality monitoring, emission modeling, atmospheric chemistry, and climate impact assessment. Known for his interdisciplinary research, Dr. Munir thrives in collaborative environments and utilizes machine learning, QGIS, and R to solve complex environmental problems. He has authored over 50 peer-reviewed publications and is recognized globally for his work in both academia and public policy.

Profile

Orcid

🎓 Education

Dr. Said Munir holds a 🎓 Ph.D. in Air Quality and Transport Studies from the University of Leeds, UK (2009–2013), where he conducted pioneering research on the spatial-temporal analysis of traffic-related ground-level ozone ([Link to Thesis]). He previously earned a 🌬️ Master’s degree in Air Pollution Management and Control from the University of Birmingham, UK (2008–2009), focusing his dissertation on the impact of ozone on UK agriculture. Earlier, he completed a 🌍 Master’s in Natural Resources Management at the University of Greenwich, UK (1999–2000), where he assessed atmospheric pollutants using simple methodologies. Dr. Munir began his academic journey with a 🌾 B.Sc. (Hons) in Agriculture from the Agricultural University Peshawar, Pakistan (1995–1998), graduating with First Class Honours and an impressive GPA of 3.86/4.00. His multidisciplinary education reflects a deep commitment to understanding and managing environmental challenges at the intersection of air quality, transport, and agriculture.

💼 Experience

Dr. Said Munir is currently serving as an Air Quality and Meteorology Expert at the National Center for Meteorology, Saudi Arabia (2024–Present), where he leads national-level projects on air quality and drought variability, employing advanced modeling techniques and machine learning. Prior to this, he was a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Leeds, UK (2021–2024), contributing to high-impact EU-funded projects such as nPETS and MODALES, focused on nanoparticle emissions, transport, and climate-health policy development. From 2017 to 2021, Dr. Munir worked as a Research Associate at the University of Sheffield, UK, where he managed urban air quality sensor networks, conducted high-resolution pollution mapping, and carried out source apportionment studies, playing a key role in advancing urban environmental monitoring systems.

🔬 Research Interests

🌫️ Air Quality Monitoring & Impact Assessment

💻 Machine Learning in Environmental Science

🌍 Emission & Dispersion Modeling (ADMS-Urban, Airviro)

🧪 Atmospheric Chemistry and Receptor Modelling

🛰️ Geospatial and Statistical Analysis (QGIS, R)

☀️ Climate Change, Drought Indices, and Environmental Policy

🏆 Awards & Grants

Multiple national and international research grants from EU and UK agencies.

Contributor to high-impact environmental policy frameworks in Saudi Arabia and the UK.

Recognized for advancing low-cost sensor technology and nanoparticle emission mitigation.

📚 Selected Publications

Munir et al. (2025)Drought variabilities in Saudi Arabia: Spatiotemporal trends – Earth Systems and Environment.
DOI: 10.1007/s41748-025-00570-w
Cited by: 2 articles

Munir et al. (2025)PM2.5 Variability in Saudi Arabia – Atmosphere, 16, 463.
DOI: 10.3390/atmos16040463
Cited by: 4 articles

Munir et al. (2025)Machine Learning & Source Apportionment in Saudi ArabiaWater, Soil and Air Pollution (Under Review)
Cited by: Awaiting peer review

Munir et al. (2025)Urban Nanoparticle Emission Modeling – Atmosphere, 16(4), 417.
DOI: 10.3390/atmos16040417
Cited by: 1 article

Al-Hajji et al. (2025)Dust Storm Climate Study in Riyadh – Int. J. of Environment and Climate Change, 15(3): 381-99.
DOI: 10.9734/ijecc/2025/v15i34780
Cited by: 3 articles