After graduation, Adamović worked as a Royal Serbian School Board high school teacher in the various towns in southern Serbia, such as Zaječar, Pirot, Gornji Milanovac and Vranje. From 1901 to 1905 Adamović was director of the Jevremovac Botanical Garden of the University of Belgrade. He lived temporarily in Vienna and Italy. Adamović was a private lecturer in phytogeography at the University of Vienna. In 1907, as an associate member of the Yugoslav Academy of Science and Arts and Sciences in Zagreb, he published papers on the flora of Dalmatia, Herzegovina, Serbia and Montenegro.
Scientific work
Adamović mainly dealt with the vegetation of the Balkan Peninsula. In his time he was one of the best experts in the vegetation and flora of Southeast Europe and has written fundamental works on the subject. In the mentor Richard Wettstein, he had an important advocate for his research stays in the regions of the Danube lowlands, Romania, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Thrace, Thessaly, as well as the Apennine Peninsula, through which he got a comprehensive knowledge of the plant formations of Southeast Europe and the Mediterranean region. In particular, his knowledge of the flora and vegetation of Dalmatia, Bosnia, and Herzegovina, Montenegro and Albania were fundamental. Adamović coined the terms Šibljak and pseudomacchie for shrubbery formations of these karst countries of the Dinarides, which have found their way into the terminology of vegetation geography.
From 1896 to 1910, he was the editor of the exsiccata work "Plantae balcanicae exsiccatae".[5] Adamović made valuable contributions to Volume 11, "The Vegetation Conditions of the Balkans" (1909),[6] and also contributions involving Hieracium towards Adolf Engler and Carl Georg Oscar Drude's Die Vegetation der Erde[7] or "The Vegetation of the Earth."[8]
Adamović's most important floristic work was the processing of the flora of Montenegro (Građa za floru kraljevine Crne Gore), which was not mentioned in Czech botanist Joseph Rohlena's Conspectus Florae montenegrinae or in August von Hayek's Prodromus Florae Peninsulae Balcanicae. Between 1905 and 1911 Adamović made various trips for this flora of Montenegro, collecting several times on the Orjen, Komovi and Durmitor around 1000 documents of the flora of the southeastern Dinaric region. Adamović was the only botanist in Montenegro after Josif Pančić to collect plants again on the Velika Jastrebica in the Bijela gora. He published more than 60 scientific papers and books and described some new plant species and taxa.>[9]
After retirement, he returned to Dubrovnik, where he died in 1935, at the time of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Today Lujo Adamović is considered one of stellar botanist of Serbia of the 19th and 20th century, including Josif Pančić, Sava Petrović, Sava Hilandarac, Nedeljko Košanin, Teodor Soška, and others.[10]
Major works
The most significant work in his opus is—The Vegetation Conditions of the Balkans (Die Vegetationsverhältnisse der Balkanländer, 1909 & 1916)[11]—now considered one of the classic works of the science of vegetation formations. Also important are:
Die pflanzengeographische Stellung und Gliederung Italiens/The geographical position and structure of Italy, 1933[12]