TreeSense
Ziad Ramzy is a Full-stack Developer Working Student at TreeSense since April 2023, focusing on implementing irrigation efficiency. Prior experience includes a Software Engineer Working Student role at PreciTaste from October 2021 to September 2023 and a Back End Developer position during a summer internship at EVA Pharma in August 2020, where contributions included developing a system to digitize the recruitment cycle. Additionally, Ziad completed an Information Technology Internship at Emirates NBD in July 2018, gaining skills in data storage and web application integration. Ziad holds a Bachelor of Science in Media Engineering Technology from The German University in Cairo and completed a Bachelor Thesis in Computer Science at Universität zu Lübeck in 2019. Currently, Ziad is pursuing a Master of Science in Data Engineering & Analytics at the Technical University of Munich.
This person is not in any teams
TreeSense
The trees of planet Earth are suffering. Not least due to climate change and rising temperatures, dry periods are becoming more frequent, which ultimately lead to forest fires or forest dieback, reduced harvests and also drought stress for urban trees. Urban trees in particular not only play an important role in the overall appearance of a community or city, but also have important functions in making cities more livable. These include, above all, improving air quality, lowering outdoor temperatures, and we humans are also directly affected. Urban irrigation is designed to be ad hoc and not precise. However, it should be tailored to the tree's individual needs based on tree species, drought period, tree size, irradiation, and water storage capacity of soil or substrate. To make arboriculture more efficient for urban trees, Treesense has developed Treesense Pulse – the wearable for trees. Treesense Pulse is a sensor that innovatively monitors the water balance and thus the health and maintenance needs of the trees. Very specifically, the sensor measures a type of electrical resistance in the xylem part of woody plants. This part is responsible for water transport from the roots to the tree crown. Simply spoken: The more active the tree, the more water flows through the xylem channels and the more water in the xylem channels the lower the electrical resistance. This measurement is taken periodically, every 10 minutes, creating a curve that is then used in further analyses to monitor tree health and necessary maintenance measures in real-time. On a platform, the Treesense Cloud, a predictive maintenance tool is thus provided on the basis of collected data on the urban green. With the data collected, that is, coupling the individual "heart rate" of the representative trees with external information from weather-related data, it is possible to understand exactly how tree health is evolving in real time and maintenance needs are predicted beforehand.