History   - major achievements

Department of Agrometeorology                                                                                                           back

       
        After the reorganization of the PINGW in 1950 research within the scope of meteorology was conducted at more than one unit of the Puławy research centre. In the years between 1953 and 1956 it was confined mainly to the Laboratory of Local Climate and Microclimate of the IMUZ. In 1957 the IMUZ moved from Puławy and at the IUNG the Autonomous Laboratory of Agricultural Meteorology and Climatology was created with dr. Henryk Mitosek as Head. As of 1962 Tadeusz Górski, MSc, became Head of the Laboratory. In 1966 the Laboratory was changed into the Agrometeorology Department, headed by dr. Tadeusz Górski. Initially the Department had 9 persons of staff: 2 scientific workers, 6 technicians and 1 hand. The activities were focused on research methodology and problems within the scope of microclimatology and agrohydrometeorology, for which empirical materials were acquired from fields at Kępa and Osiny experimental stations. Fixed fields of 1 hectare of area, cultivated according to unchanging tillage practices were the experimental objects on which the experiments begun by the earlier research units were continued, aided with the current biometric, phonologic and physical agrometeorologic information. Measurements of atmospheric pollution within the impact range of chemical works in the Puławy region and in Sulphur Basin had been conducted for a few years.
        Owing to scientific and organizational initiative of Prof. Tadeusz Górski the research area was broadened, co-operation with other scientific centres was initiated and the number of staff raised. Between 1971 and 1975 the research had been focused mainly on climatic requirements of various crops and methods of objective assessment of yield-effectiveness of the climate. The agroclimatic valuation was elaborated at the Department as part of the complex valuation of agricultural production space of Poland developed by an inter-departmental team. For this achievement the team was awarded the first degree State Reward. The actinometrical measurements that had been previously conducted at Puławy for a long time were expanded and large-scale research within the scope of photoecology was begun; the latter was conducted at a laboratory founded in the Upper Garden inside the Department's own means. In 1971, after many years of research, the activities on the fixed fields had been finished and the empirical materials acquired were taken over by dr. Zygmunt Jakubczak, who moved with two other employees to the Department of Soil Science and Recultivation of the IUNG.
        Apart from a diverse scientific programme at the Department standard measurements of weather elements were carried out as well as special ones stimulated by the needs of field experiments of the Institute. For this purpose, in early 70s, the Meteorogical Service was created, supervised by Józef Wójcik. The organizational structure of weather stations network of experimental stations of the IUNG was established and the departmental data archive was extended. In 1972 the XXII Agrometeorological Meeting was organized on the occasion of the Centenary of Meteorology in Puławy. This anniversary was mainly related to the functioning of the Puławy weather station, which had been run by the Department of Agrometeorology, one of only few stations in Poland of such long measurement series.
        In late 70s the Department was in charge of co-ordination of a nation-wide project concerning agrometeorological basis of yield forecasting. Apart from that the research into climatic requirements of maize production for different uses was conducted. Furthermore, work on the methodology of loss assessment in plant production as caused by precipitation deficiency was conducted. At the end of 70s the number of staff at the Department reached 17 persons: 4 scientific workers, 10 technicians and 3 hands.
          Between 1981 and 1990 the Agrometeorology Laboratory, headed by dr. Gustaw Demidowicz, functioned within the Department. Its team, numbering 8 people, conducted work on climatic requirements of plants in which these properties had been unknown before. The Laboratory also developed the agroclimatic valuation to the scale of voivodship. Moreover, Prof. T. Górski, Head of the Department, formed an informal small group to continue the earlier research into variability of crop yielding and photobiology of seeds and plants. The research into variability of climatic elements and its description in probabilistic terms as well as refining methods of determination the relationship between development and yielding of plants and the weather was also going on. This research became the information and methodology foundation for the Agroclimatic Atlas of Poland, the elaboration of which was begun within a broad thematic scope; the task was to crone the earlier achievements of the Department in the field of agrometeorology.
        In the 90s the development of the Atlas was aided with computer technology. In addition, the research into the impacts of climate change on plant production was conducted and climatic index of water balance was constructed. The homogenization of temperature and precipitation series of the length of over one century from the weather station in Puławy was accomplished. In the field of photoecology the research into exploiting the photoblastism of seeds in weed control in crops was conducted as well as into photomorphogenetic factors of habit and yielding formation of plants in stand. In 1992 the Department of Agrometeorology hosted the III Nation-wide Scientific Symposium "Climate of the Cultivated Field".
        As of 1995 dr Gustaw Demidowicz became Head of Department. In 1996 the anniversary of 125 years of agricultural meteorology in Puławy was celebrated and on this occasion the International Scientific Conference "Climatic Conditions of Plant Poduction" and the International Seminar on Phytoactinometry were held. The Seminars on Phytoactinometry have been organized at the Institute for many years owing to a strong scientific position of the photoecology team at the Department. The employees of the Department took part in the realization of the commissioned research project "Methodology of current and long-term forecasting of production volume of staple crops in Poland". The statistical and empirical methods developed within the project have been used since in the current forecasting service run by the Department. In co-operation with the Department of Applied Mathematics and Informatics the Agroclimatic Atlas of Poland was finished in the form of computer programs generating data for map creation.
Opr. Gustaw Demidowicz