Farid Dahdouh-Guebas is a Full Professor at ULB and directs the Systems Ecology and Resource Management research unit of the Department of Organismal Biology, a department which he also chairs. Farid Dahdouh-Guebas is also the Founding Director and Manager of the TROPIMUNDO Master of Excellence (Erasmus Mundus Joint Master Degree in Tropical Biodiversity and Ecosystems) including the VLIR-UOS ICP Mundus tropicalis. He also works for international institutions such as the International Union for Conservation of Nature. He teaches courses on Social-Ecological Systems, Plant Ecology, Terrestrial Ecosystems, and Integrated Coastal Zone Management. Active in science education he also teaches skills in scientific presentations and in planning a career in which family and kindness comes first. Since the 1990s he has studied mangrove forests in a transdisciplinary manner with 4 main research areas: (i) the ecology and spatio-temporal dynamics of vegetation and landscape (botany and tropical phytosociology, very high resolution remote sensing, plant-animal interactions), (ii) ethnobiology and socio-ecology (investigations into ecosystem goods and services, resilience of mangrove socio-ecological systems), (iii) restoration ecology (consolidation of the functions of the ecosystem, state of health of the ecosystem), and (iv) management (preservation, restoration options, governance). His studies are carried out on different spatial scales from local case studies in several tropical countries to the macro-ecological (global) level and also explores the interface between science and policy. Over the past 30 years, he has worked in more than 25 countries, published >225 peer-reviewed articles between journals such as Current Biology, Science, Nature Plants, Nature Communications, PNAS, OneEarth etc., and has obtained numerous scientific prizes and distinctions. Not only is he among the world's most productive scientists in the field of mangroves, but with more than 10,000 citations he also holds a position in the list of the world's Top 2% researchers in Ecology, Hydrobiology and Marine Biology published by Stanford University.