John Monteith
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John Lennox Monteith DSc, FRS, born September 3, 1929 in Ayrshire, Scotland, is a leading authority in the related fields of water management for agricultural production, soil physics, micrometeorology, transpiration, and the influence of the natural environment on field crops, horticultural crops, forestry, and animal production.
His pioneering work, with Howard Penman, in evapotranspiration, is applied worldwide as the "Penman-Monteith" equation. Their model for predicting evapotranspiration is recommended by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Monteith's research on the role of the environment in agriculture, the physics of crop microclimate, physiology of crop growth and yield, radiation climatology heat balance in animals, and instrumentation for measuring physical and physiological variables in agriculture has been published in journals throughout the world.
Career
- 1954 Rothamsted Experimental Station, Harpenden, Herts, UK
- 1967 University of Nottingham, School of Agriculture, UK
- 1986 International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Hyderabad, India
Awards
- Elected Fellow of the Royal Society, 1971
- Awarded Rank Prize for Human and Animal Nutrition and Crop Husbandry, 1989
- Honorary Doctor of Science,University of Edinburgh, 1989
Publications
- Principles of Environmental Physics; JL Monteith, M Unsworth ISBN 0-7131-2931-X