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Antonín Vězda

Antonín (Toni) Vězda (25 November 1920 – 10 November 2008) was a Czech lichenologist. After completing a university education that was postponed by World War II, Vězda taught botany at the Czech University of Life Sciences. In 1958, he was dismissed from his university position as a result of the restrictions placed on academic freedoms by the communist regime in power. He eventually was hired as a lichen researcher by the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, who allowed him to work from his apartment, which served also as an office and herbarium.

Antonín Vězda
Born(1920-11-25)25 November 1920
Died10 November 2008(2008-11-10) (aged 87)
Brno, Czech Republic
NationalityCzech
Alma materMasaryk University; Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences
AwardsAcharius Medal (1992)[1]
Scientific career
FieldsLichenology
InstitutionsCzechoslovak Academy of Sciences
Author abbrev. (botany)Vězda[2]

Vězda was a productive worker, publishing nearly 400 scientific papers between 1948 and 2008, most solitarily, describing hundreds of new taxa, and building up a herbarium collection of more than 300,000 specimens. He was praised for his series of exsiccates – sets of dried herbarium specimens – assembled with both local species as well as samples sent to him from colleagues throughout the world. Known as an outstanding lichen taxonomist, he was awarded an Acharius Medal in 1992 for his lifetime contributions to lichenology. Two genera and twenty-four species have been named in honour of Vězda.

Biography edit

Vězda was born in Brno on 25 November 1920. His father, a printer, was interested in horticulture and mycology, which may have helped spur an early interest in natural history. Vězda qualified to enter university in 1940, but the German occupation of Czechoslovakia during World War II made it impossible for him to study. In 1945 he became an assistant to Alois Zlatník (dendrologist in the Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry at the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague) and at the same time began study of natural history at Masaryk University in Brno. He earned two diplomas, in science and in forestry, from this institution in 1947. In 1951 he completed a diploma in forestry engineering at the Agricultural University as a forest engineer, and started teaching forest botany at this institution.[3] Vězda, like many other academics at that time, was dismissed from university for political reasons in 1958, as they were considered untrustworthy by the communist regime in power. With his academic freedoms thus restricted,[4] he worked as a forester. After studying at the Botanical Institute of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences in Průhonice near Prague, he became a researcher in lichenology for this institution starting in 1963 – this was a job he was allowed to do at home. His three-room apartment in Brno became his office, herbarium, and home. His address, Tábor 28A, eventually became well known to lichenologists over the world, many of whom who knew him only through correspondence or by sending him specimens to study. In 1967 Vězda earned a Candidate of Sciences degree after defending a dissertation on the family Gyalectaceae.[3] This dissertation launched his international career, and, despite the isolation imposed by the communist regime, he continued corresponding with prominent lichenologists worldwide, some of whom visited him, or sent him collections for analysis.[5] It was in this way that he met Josef Poelt, with whom he developed a long-lasting friendship.[6]

 
 
Two of the many lichen species that Vězda has introduced as new to science are Caloplaca adnexa Vězda (1977) (top) and Gyalideopsis buckii Lücking, Sérus. & Vězda (2005) (bottom)

Vězda was a passionate collector of lichens. During the time of the Iron Curtain, his travels had to be limited to Eastern Europe and the Caucasus; even there he could often only collect disguised as a tourist. It was only later, after retirement, that he visited many regions in Western and Southern Europe and overseas areas, including the Canary Islands, Dominica, New Zealand, Malaysia, and Seychelles.[7] Vězda created several extensive works of exsiccata (a collection or series of dried herbarium specimens). His exsiccata collection titled Lichenes Cechoslovakiae exsiccati contained many species from his home country, while Lichenes selecti exsiccati became one of the largest exsiccata ever issued, with around 2500 specimens;[1] he was praised by colleagues and herbaria curators worldwide for this collection.[8] His exsiccata series Lichenes Rariores Exsiccati (1992–2003) contained nearly 500 specimens with material gathered by 72 collectors.[9]

Known as one of the best lichen taxonomists, Vězda had a prolific output as a scientist, publishing 376 scientific papers between 1948 and 2008. About 70% of these papers were published solitarily; when he did have co-authors, they were most often Josef Poelt, William W. Malcolm, and Klaus Kalb. He named 478 taxa, including 2 families (Protothelenellaceae Vězda, H.Mayrhofer & Poelt, and Solorinellaceae Vězda & Poelt), 38 genera, and 399 species, and several taxa at various other ranks.[10] He also proposed 282 new combinations.[11] In the year before his death, Vězda published a summary of the new species he and coauthors described between 1958 and 2007.[12] He developed an early interest in the family Gyalectaceae, including the genera Bacidia and Micarea. The first species he described was Gyalecta cernohorskyi in 1958.[3] Vězda has been credited with introducing the lichen term hyphophore in a 1973 publication, referring to a microscopic spore-producing structure found in tropical foliicolous lichens.[13]

Vězda was active as a lichenologist well into his 80s. In addition to his collection of about 10,000 reprints and 500 books about lichens, his personal herbarium amassed more than 300,000 specimens; these collections are now kept at the Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences.[14] Antonín Vězda died in Brno on 10 November 2008, at the age of 87.[15]

Recognition edit

Vězda was one of the first recipients of the prestigious Acharius Medal in 1992, awarded for lifetime contributions to lichenology.[16] A Festschrift was dedicated to him in 1995 in the journal Scripta Lichenologica, on the occasion of his 75th birthday.[17] The same year, he won the Holuby memorial medal from the Slovak Botanical Society.[15] An exsiccate issued in 2010, containing "little, fine, special lichens and lichenicolous fungi", was dedicated to him by Hungarian lichenologist Edit Farkas.[18] He became an honorary member of the British Lichen Society, the Societa Lichenologica Italiana, the Czech Botanical Society, and the Czech Scientific Society for Mycology.[15]

Vězda has been used as an example of someone most closely approaching the ideal "universal lichen taxonomist", which is "characterised by a broad knowledge in lichen taxonomy, prolificacy and efficiency in publishing their studies, usually in sole authorship, and distribution of knowledge via exsiccata rather than teaching or having students".[7] The National Museum in Prague, which holds his extensive collections of exsiccate material, calls him "possibly the best-known Czech lichenologist".[19] Robert Lücking, a former mentee of Vězda, suggested that he may have been "the most eminent lichen taxonomist of the past century".[20]

Eponymy edit

Two genera have been named to honour Antonín Vězda: Vezdaea Tscherm.-Woess & Poelt (1976), and Zevadia J.C.David & D.Hawksw. (1995). Vězda has also had many species named after him, including: Asterothyrium vezdae Flakus & Lücking (2008); Bacidia vezdae Coppins & P.James (1978); Bacidia vezdana Lücking (1992); Badimia vezdana Lücking, Farkas & V.Wirth (2011); Belonia vezdana Malcolm & Coppins (1997); Buellia vezdana P.Scholz & Knoph (1995); Byssolecania vezdae Kalb & Lücking (2000); Byssoloma vezdanum Sérus. (1978); Chromatochlamys vezdae H.Mayrhofer & Poelt (1985); Cliostomum vezdae Kantvilas & Elix (1995); Dimerella vezdana Lücking (1999); Enterographa vezdae Sparrius (2004); Gyalideopsis vezdae Kalb (1983); Laurera vezdae Makhija & Patw. (1988); Lecidea vezdae V.Wirth (1974); Linhartia vezdana Lücking (1995); Ocellularia vezdana Frisch (2006); Porina vezdae Lücking (1991); Rinodina vezdae H.Mayrhofer (1984); Stigmidium vezdae Matzer (1996); Thelotrema antoninii Purvis & P.James (1995); Topeliopsis vezdae Kalb (2001); Tricharia vezdae W.R.Buck (1980);[21][22] and Echinoplaca vezdana Lücking & Kalb (2001).[23]

Selected publications edit

A complete listing of Vězda's scientific publications up to 2006 is given in a series of publications by Černohorský (1980),[24] Pišút (1990) and (2001),[25][26] and Krahulec and Palice (2006).[14] Some of his major works include:

  • Vězda, Antonín (1975). "Foliikole Flechten aus Tanzania (Ost-Afrika)". Folia Geobotanica et Phytotaxonomica. 10 (4): 383–432. doi:10.1007/BF02854975. S2CID 11344743.
  • Poelt, Josef; Vězda, Antonín (1977). Bestimmungsschlussel europaischer Flechten (in German). Berlin: J. Cramer. ISBN 978-3768201599.
  • Vězda, Antonín (1986). "Neue Gattungen der Familie Lecideaceae s. lat. (Lichenes)". Folia Geobotanica & Phytotaxonomica. 21 (2): 199–219. doi:10.1007/BF02854668. JSTOR 4180678. S2CID 43365789.
  • Kalb, K.; Vězda, A. (1988). Neue oder bemerkenswerte Arten der Flechtenfamilie Gomphillaceae in der Neotropis [New or otherwise interesting species of the lichen family Gomphillaceae in the Neotropics]. Bibliotheca Lichenologica (in German). Vol. 29. Lubrecht & Kramer. pp. 1–80. ISBN 978-3443580087.
  • Lücking, Robert; Vězda, Antonín (1998). "Taxonomic studies in foliicolous species of the genus Porina (lichenized Ascomycotina: Trichotheliaceae)—II. The Porina epiphylla group". Willdenowia. 28 (1/2): 181–225. doi:10.3372/wi.28.2818. JSTOR 3997034. S2CID 86246435.
  • Lücking, Robert; Sérusiaux, Emmanuël; Vězda, Antonín (2005). "Phylogeny and systematics of the lichen family Gomphillaceae (Ostropales) inferred from cladistic analysis of phenotype data". The Lichenologist. 37 (2): 123–170. doi:10.1017/S0024282905014660. hdl:2268/175274. S2CID 85597022.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Poelt, J. . International Association for Lichenology. Archived from the original on 10 March 2007. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Vězda, Antonín (1920-2008)". International Plant Names Index. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Farkas, Lücking & Wirth 2010, p. 10.
  4. ^ Danihelka, Jiří; Chytrý, Milan; Kučera, Jan; Palice, Zdeněk (2017). "History of Botanical Research in the Czech Republic". In Chytrý, Milan; Danihelka, Jiří; Kaplan, Zdeněk; Pyšek, Petr (eds.). Flora and Vegetation of the Czech Republic. Springer. p. 61. ISBN 978-3-319-63181-3.
  5. ^ Kärnefelt 2009, pp. 343–345.
  6. ^ Poelt, J. (1995). "Antonín Vězda – der Mensch hinter dem Werk" [Antonín Vězda – the man behind the work]. Bibliotheca Lichenologica (in German). 58: 1–4.
  7. ^ a b Farkas, Lücking & Wirth 2010, p. 13.
  8. ^ Farkas, Edit; Lücking, Robert; Wirth, Volkmar (2009). "A tribute to Antonín Vězda (1920–2008)". The Lichenologist. 42 (1): 1–5. doi:10.1017/S0024282909990594.
  9. ^ Vězda, A. (2004). "Notes on the exsiccatum "Vězda: Lichenes rariores" with Index to fascicles 1–50 (Nos. 1–500)". Czech Mycology. 56 (1–2): 151–162. doi:10.33585/cmy.56111.
  10. ^ Farkas, Lücking & Wirth 2010, p. 14.
  11. ^ Farkas, Lücking & Wirth 2010, p. 15.
  12. ^ Halda, J. P.; Vězda, A. (2007). "A list of new taxa of lichens and lichenicolous fungi published by Antonín Vězda 1958–2007 by himself or together with co-authors". Acta Musei Richnoviensis Sect. Natur. 14: 69–92.
  13. ^ Mitchell, M.E. (2014). "De Bary's legacy: the emergence of differing perspectives on lichen symbiosis" (PDF). Huntia. 15 (1): 5–22 [16].
  14. ^ a b Krahulec, František; Palice, Zdeněk (2006). "Antonín Vězda – 85 years" (PDF). International Lichenological Newsletter. 38 (2): 17.
  15. ^ a b c Farkas, Lücking & Wirth 2010, p. 9.
  16. ^ Poelt, J. (1993). (PDF). International Lichenological Newsletter. 26: 31–32. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 June 2022. Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  17. ^ Farkas, Edit E.; Lücking, Robert; Wirth, Volkmar (, eds. (1995). Scripta Lichenologica – Lichenological Papers Dedicated to Antonín Vězda. Bibliotheca Lichenologica. Vol. 58. Berlin: J. Cramer. pp. 1–501. ISBN 978-3-443-58037-7.
  18. ^ Farkas, E. (2010). "Notes and schedae to Lichenes Delicati Exsiccati Editae in memoriam Antonín Vězda (1920–2008), Fasc. 1" (PDF). Acta Botanica Hungarica. 52 (3–4): 331–340. doi:10.1556/ABot.52.2010.3-4.11. S2CID 86528219.
  19. ^ "Lichenological collection". National Museum (Prague). Retrieved 6 January 2021.
  20. ^ "Lichenology – Past, Present and Future « Life Sciences# « Cambridge Core Blog". Cambridge Core blog. 12 March 2021. Retrieved 14 December 2022.
  21. ^ Farkas, Lücking & Wirth 2010, pp. 9–10.
  22. ^ Hertel, Hannes; Gärtner, Georg; Lőkös, László (2017). "Forscher an Österreichs Flechtenflora" [Investigators of Austria's lichen flora] (PDF). Stapfia (in German). 104 (2): 158.
  23. ^ Lücking, Robert; Kalb, Klaus (2001). "Echinoplaca vezdana (Ostropales: Gomphillaceae): a new lichenised fungus". Taxon. 50 (3): 837–840. doi:10.2307/1223711. JSTOR 1223711.
  24. ^ Černohorský, Z. (1980). "RNDr. Ing. Antonín Vězda, CSc. – 60 let". Preslia (in Czech). 52: 367–371.
  25. ^ Pišút, I. (1990). "RNDr. Ing. Antonín Vězda, CSc. – 70 rokov". Preslia (in Czech). 62: 376–377.
  26. ^ Pišút, I. (2001). "RNDr. Ing. Antonín Vězda, CSc., octogenerian". Biologia, Bratislava (in Czech). 56 (4): 458–460.

Cited literature edit

  • Farkas, E.; Lücking, R.; Wirth, V. (2010). "In memoriam Antonín Vězda (1920–2008)". Acta Botanica Hungarica. 52 (1–2): 9–21. doi:10.1556/ABot.52.2010.1-2.2.
  • Kärnefelt, Ingvar (2009). "Fifty influential lichenologists". In Thell, Arne; Seaward, Mark R. D.; Feuerer, Tassilo (eds.). Diversity of Lichenology – Anniversary Volume. Bibliotheca Lichenologica. Vol. 100. Stuttgart: J. Kramer. pp. 283–368. ISBN 978-3-443-58079-7.

antonín, vězda, antonín, toni, vězda, november, 1920, november, 2008, czech, lichenologist, after, completing, university, education, that, postponed, world, vězda, taught, botany, czech, university, life, sciences, 1958, dismissed, from, university, position,. Antonin Toni Vezda 25 November 1920 10 November 2008 was a Czech lichenologist After completing a university education that was postponed by World War II Vezda taught botany at the Czech University of Life Sciences In 1958 he was dismissed from his university position as a result of the restrictions placed on academic freedoms by the communist regime in power He eventually was hired as a lichen researcher by the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences who allowed him to work from his apartment which served also as an office and herbarium Antonin VezdaBorn 1920 11 25 25 November 1920Brno CzechoslovakiaDied10 November 2008 2008 11 10 aged 87 Brno Czech RepublicNationalityCzechAlma materMasaryk University Czechoslovak Academy of SciencesAwardsAcharius Medal 1992 1 Scientific careerFieldsLichenologyInstitutionsCzechoslovak Academy of SciencesAuthor abbrev botany Vezda 2 Vezda was a productive worker publishing nearly 400 scientific papers between 1948 and 2008 most solitarily describing hundreds of new taxa and building up a herbarium collection of more than 300 000 specimens He was praised for his series of exsiccates sets of dried herbarium specimens assembled with both local species as well as samples sent to him from colleagues throughout the world Known as an outstanding lichen taxonomist he was awarded an Acharius Medal in 1992 for his lifetime contributions to lichenology Two genera and twenty four species have been named in honour of Vezda Contents 1 Biography 2 Recognition 2 1 Eponymy 3 Selected publications 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Cited literatureBiography editVezda was born in Brno on 25 November 1920 His father a printer was interested in horticulture and mycology which may have helped spur an early interest in natural history Vezda qualified to enter university in 1940 but the German occupation of Czechoslovakia during World War II made it impossible for him to study In 1945 he became an assistant to Alois Zlatnik dendrologist in the Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry at the Czech University of Life Sciences Prague and at the same time began study of natural history at Masaryk University in Brno He earned two diplomas in science and in forestry from this institution in 1947 In 1951 he completed a diploma in forestry engineering at the Agricultural University as a forest engineer and started teaching forest botany at this institution 3 Vezda like many other academics at that time was dismissed from university for political reasons in 1958 as they were considered untrustworthy by the communist regime in power With his academic freedoms thus restricted 4 he worked as a forester After studying at the Botanical Institute of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences in Pruhonice near Prague he became a researcher in lichenology for this institution starting in 1963 this was a job he was allowed to do at home His three room apartment in Brno became his office herbarium and home His address Tabor 28A eventually became well known to lichenologists over the world many of whom who knew him only through correspondence or by sending him specimens to study In 1967 Vezda earned a Candidate of Sciences degree after defending a dissertation on the family Gyalectaceae 3 This dissertation launched his international career and despite the isolation imposed by the communist regime he continued corresponding with prominent lichenologists worldwide some of whom visited him or sent him collections for analysis 5 It was in this way that he met Josef Poelt with whom he developed a long lasting friendship 6 nbsp nbsp Two of the many lichen species that Vezda has introduced as new to science are Caloplaca adnexa Vezda 1977 top and Gyalideopsis buckii Lucking Serus amp Vezda 2005 bottom Vezda was a passionate collector of lichens During the time of the Iron Curtain his travels had to be limited to Eastern Europe and the Caucasus even there he could often only collect disguised as a tourist It was only later after retirement that he visited many regions in Western and Southern Europe and overseas areas including the Canary Islands Dominica New Zealand Malaysia and Seychelles 7 Vezda created several extensive works of exsiccata a collection or series of dried herbarium specimens His exsiccata collection titled Lichenes Cechoslovakiae exsiccati contained many species from his home country while Lichenes selecti exsiccati became one of the largest exsiccata ever issued with around 2500 specimens 1 he was praised by colleagues and herbaria curators worldwide for this collection 8 His exsiccata series Lichenes Rariores Exsiccati 1992 2003 contained nearly 500 specimens with material gathered by 72 collectors 9 Known as one of the best lichen taxonomists Vezda had a prolific output as a scientist publishing 376 scientific papers between 1948 and 2008 About 70 of these papers were published solitarily when he did have co authors they were most often Josef Poelt William W Malcolm and Klaus Kalb He named 478 taxa including 2 families Protothelenellaceae Vezda H Mayrhofer amp Poelt and Solorinellaceae Vezda amp Poelt 38 genera and 399 species and several taxa at various other ranks 10 He also proposed 282 new combinations 11 In the year before his death Vezda published a summary of the new species he and coauthors described between 1958 and 2007 12 He developed an early interest in the family Gyalectaceae including the genera Bacidia and Micarea The first species he described was Gyalecta cernohorskyi in 1958 3 Vezda has been credited with introducing the lichen term hyphophore in a 1973 publication referring to a microscopic spore producing structure found in tropical foliicolous lichens 13 Vezda was active as a lichenologist well into his 80s In addition to his collection of about 10 000 reprints and 500 books about lichens his personal herbarium amassed more than 300 000 specimens these collections are now kept at the Institute of Botany of the Czech Academy of Sciences 14 Antonin Vezda died in Brno on 10 November 2008 at the age of 87 15 Recognition editVezda was one of the first recipients of the prestigious Acharius Medal in 1992 awarded for lifetime contributions to lichenology 16 A Festschrift was dedicated to him in 1995 in the journal Scripta Lichenologica on the occasion of his 75th birthday 17 The same year he won the Holuby memorial medal from the Slovak Botanical Society 15 An exsiccate issued in 2010 containing little fine special lichens and lichenicolous fungi was dedicated to him by Hungarian lichenologist Edit Farkas 18 He became an honorary member of the British Lichen Society the Societa Lichenologica Italiana the Czech Botanical Society and the Czech Scientific Society for Mycology 15 Vezda has been used as an example of someone most closely approaching the ideal universal lichen taxonomist which is characterised by a broad knowledge in lichen taxonomy prolificacy and efficiency in publishing their studies usually in sole authorship and distribution of knowledge via exsiccata rather than teaching or having students 7 The National Museum in Prague which holds his extensive collections of exsiccate material calls him possibly the best known Czech lichenologist 19 Robert Lucking a former mentee of Vezda suggested that he may have been the most eminent lichen taxonomist of the past century 20 Eponymy edit Two genera have been named to honour Antonin Vezda Vezdaea Tscherm Woess amp Poelt 1976 and Zevadia J C David amp D Hawksw 1995 Vezda has also had many species named after him including Asterothyrium vezdae Flakus amp Lucking 2008 Bacidia vezdae Coppins amp P James 1978 Bacidia vezdana Lucking 1992 Badimia vezdana Lucking Farkas amp V Wirth 2011 Belonia vezdana Malcolm amp Coppins 1997 Buellia vezdana P Scholz amp Knoph 1995 Byssolecania vezdae Kalb amp Lucking 2000 Byssoloma vezdanum Serus 1978 Chromatochlamys vezdae H Mayrhofer amp Poelt 1985 Cliostomum vezdae Kantvilas amp Elix 1995 Dimerella vezdana Lucking 1999 Enterographa vezdae Sparrius 2004 Gyalideopsis vezdae Kalb 1983 Laurera vezdae Makhija amp Patw 1988 Lecidea vezdae V Wirth 1974 Linhartia vezdana Lucking 1995 Ocellularia vezdana Frisch 2006 Porina vezdae Lucking 1991 Rinodina vezdae H Mayrhofer 1984 Stigmidium vezdae Matzer 1996 Thelotrema antoninii Purvis amp P James 1995 Topeliopsis vezdae Kalb 2001 Tricharia vezdae W R Buck 1980 21 22 and Echinoplaca vezdana Lucking amp Kalb 2001 23 Selected publications editA complete listing of Vezda s scientific publications up to 2006 is given in a series of publications by Cernohorsky 1980 24 Pisut 1990 and 2001 25 26 and Krahulec and Palice 2006 14 Some of his major works include Vezda Antonin 1975 Foliikole Flechten aus Tanzania Ost Afrika Folia Geobotanica et Phytotaxonomica 10 4 383 432 doi 10 1007 BF02854975 S2CID 11344743 Poelt Josef Vezda Antonin 1977 Bestimmungsschlussel europaischer Flechten in German Berlin J Cramer ISBN 978 3768201599 Vezda Antonin 1986 Neue Gattungen der Familie Lecideaceae s lat Lichenes Folia Geobotanica amp Phytotaxonomica 21 2 199 219 doi 10 1007 BF02854668 JSTOR 4180678 S2CID 43365789 Kalb K Vezda A 1988 Neue oder bemerkenswerte Arten der Flechtenfamilie Gomphillaceae in der Neotropis New or otherwise interesting species of the lichen family Gomphillaceae in the Neotropics Bibliotheca Lichenologica in German Vol 29 Lubrecht amp Kramer pp 1 80 ISBN 978 3443580087 Lucking Robert Vezda Antonin 1998 Taxonomic studies in foliicolous species of the genus Porina lichenized Ascomycotina Trichotheliaceae II The Porina epiphylla group Willdenowia 28 1 2 181 225 doi 10 3372 wi 28 2818 JSTOR 3997034 S2CID 86246435 Lucking Robert Serusiaux Emmanuel Vezda Antonin 2005 Phylogeny and systematics of the lichen family Gomphillaceae Ostropales inferred from cladistic analysis of phenotype data The Lichenologist 37 2 123 170 doi 10 1017 S0024282905014660 hdl 2268 175274 S2CID 85597022 See also editCategory Taxa named by Antonin VezdaReferences edit a b Poelt J Acharius Medallists Antonin Vezda International Association for Lichenology Archived from the original on 10 March 2007 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Vezda Antonin 1920 2008 International Plant Names Index Retrieved 5 January 2020 a b c Farkas Lucking amp Wirth 2010 p 10 Danihelka Jiri Chytry Milan Kucera Jan Palice Zdenek 2017 History of Botanical Research in the Czech Republic In Chytry Milan Danihelka Jiri Kaplan Zdenek Pysek Petr eds Flora and Vegetation of the Czech Republic Springer p 61 ISBN 978 3 319 63181 3 Karnefelt 2009 pp 343 345 Poelt J 1995 Antonin Vezda der Mensch hinter dem Werk Antonin Vezda the man behind the work Bibliotheca Lichenologica in German 58 1 4 a b Farkas Lucking amp Wirth 2010 p 13 Farkas Edit Lucking Robert Wirth Volkmar 2009 A tribute to Antonin Vezda 1920 2008 The Lichenologist 42 1 1 5 doi 10 1017 S0024282909990594 Vezda A 2004 Notes on the exsiccatum Vezda Lichenes rariores with Index to fascicles 1 50 Nos 1 500 Czech Mycology 56 1 2 151 162 doi 10 33585 cmy 56111 Farkas Lucking amp Wirth 2010 p 14 Farkas Lucking amp Wirth 2010 p 15 Halda J P Vezda A 2007 A list of new taxa of lichens and lichenicolous fungi published by Antonin Vezda 1958 2007 by himself or together with co authors Acta Musei Richnoviensis Sect Natur 14 69 92 Mitchell M E 2014 De Bary s legacy the emergence of differing perspectives on lichen symbiosis PDF Huntia 15 1 5 22 16 a b Krahulec Frantisek Palice Zdenek 2006 Antonin Vezda 85 years PDF International Lichenological Newsletter 38 2 17 a b c Farkas Lucking amp Wirth 2010 p 9 Poelt J 1993 Presentations of the Acharius medals on 3 September 1992 in Bastad Sweden speeches Antonin Vezda PDF International Lichenological Newsletter 26 31 32 Archived from the original PDF on 2 June 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2021 Farkas Edit E Lucking Robert Wirth Volkmar eds 1995 Scripta Lichenologica Lichenological Papers Dedicated to Antonin Vezda Bibliotheca Lichenologica Vol 58 Berlin J Cramer pp 1 501 ISBN 978 3 443 58037 7 Farkas E 2010 Notes and schedae to Lichenes Delicati Exsiccati Editae in memoriam Antonin Vezda 1920 2008 Fasc 1 PDF Acta Botanica Hungarica 52 3 4 331 340 doi 10 1556 ABot 52 2010 3 4 11 S2CID 86528219 Lichenological collection National Museum Prague Retrieved 6 January 2021 Lichenology Past Present and Future Life Sciences Cambridge Core Blog Cambridge Core blog 12 March 2021 Retrieved 14 December 2022 Farkas Lucking amp Wirth 2010 pp 9 10 Hertel Hannes Gartner Georg Lokos Laszlo 2017 Forscher an Osterreichs Flechtenflora Investigators of Austria s lichen flora PDF Stapfia in German 104 2 158 Lucking Robert Kalb Klaus 2001 Echinoplaca vezdana Ostropales Gomphillaceae a new lichenised fungus Taxon 50 3 837 840 doi 10 2307 1223711 JSTOR 1223711 Cernohorsky Z 1980 RNDr Ing Antonin Vezda CSc 60 let Preslia in Czech 52 367 371 Pisut I 1990 RNDr Ing Antonin Vezda CSc 70 rokov Preslia in Czech 62 376 377 Pisut I 2001 RNDr Ing Antonin Vezda CSc octogenerian Biologia Bratislava in Czech 56 4 458 460 Cited literature edit Farkas E Lucking R Wirth V 2010 In memoriam Antonin Vezda 1920 2008 Acta Botanica Hungarica 52 1 2 9 21 doi 10 1556 ABot 52 2010 1 2 2 Karnefelt Ingvar 2009 Fifty influential lichenologists In Thell Arne Seaward Mark R D Feuerer Tassilo eds Diversity of Lichenology Anniversary Volume Bibliotheca Lichenologica Vol 100 Stuttgart J Kramer pp 283 368 ISBN 978 3 443 58079 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antonin Vezda amp oldid 1216888783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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