Kálmán Vánky

Kálmán Géza Vánky
Born 15 June 1930
Odorheiu Secuiesc, Romania
Residence Germany
Citizenship Swedish
Nationality Hungarian
Fields Mycology
Institutions University of Tübingen
Alma mater University of Bucharest, Uppsala University
Known for mycology of Uredinales & Ustilaginomycetes
Notable awards Pázmány Dénes Award 2012
Author abbrev. (botany) Vánky

Kálmán Géza Vánky (15 June 1930) is a Hungarian mycologist with Swedish citizenship, who lives in Germany. He is considered to be the worldwide authority on the subject of smut fungi and has dominated the taxonomic study of Ustilaginomycetes for at least the past four decades.[1]

Early life and education

Vánky was born in Odorheiu Secuiesc (Székelyudvarhely), Romania, 15 June 1930. He attended the Bethlen János Reformed School and, after it closed in 1941, the United Grammar School in Odorhei until 1949. He then began his studies at the University of Cluj (Kolozsvár) in Hungarian but completed his degree in biology at the University of Bucharest in 1953.

Early career

Between 1953 and 1957 he worked as a researcher with Professor Traian Săvulescu at the Department of Phytopathology of the Agricultural Research Institute, Bucharest, Romania, where he began studying smut fungi. However – as he always wanted to be a physician – in 1957 he left Bucharest for the Faculty of Medicine, Tîrgu-Mureş (Marosvásárhely), Romania, where he obtained his MD in 1961. From 1961 until 1964 he worked as a general practitioner in Odorhei (Székelyudvarhely), then, until 1969, he worked as a balneologist in Borszék but continued studying and collecting smut fungi.

In 1969 he left Ceauşescu’s Romania and settled in Sweden, where he obtained the Swedish MD and worked as a family physician in Gagnef village. He continued to pursue and personally fund his research in the field of smut fungus taxonomy and obtained his PhD in taxonomic botany at Uppsala University in 1985. His doctoral thesis, Carpathian Ustilaginales, was published in the academic journal Symbolae Botanicae Upsalienses.[2]

Professional mycology

In 1986 he obtained a 1-year DFG-scholarship in Germany and worked in the field of smut fungus taxonomy at the University of Tübingen, Institute of Botany, Department of Special Botany and Mycology. As the scholarship was extended successively, he decided to focus his career on mycology rather than medicine. He continued to work at the University until his retirement in 1995.

Publications

By 2014 he had published 232 scientific papers and 10 books on smut fungi. His monograph Smut Fungi of the World, published in 2012 by (APS Press) was described as “a culmination of more than 50 years of dedicated work and passion for smut fungi.”[3][4] The nearly 1500 page monograph has been described as the "Holy Book of Smut Fungi", because it comprises the description of the 1700 known species with their synonyms, important literature, their host plants and over 3.500 illustrations of which 650 are the author’s drawings of smutted plants.[5]

The third edition of his Illustrated Genera of Smut Fungi was published in 2013. In this edition, 104 recognized genera of smut fungi are presented, described and illustrated, compared to the second edition, in which 77 genera are identified.[6]

Collections

Both before and after retirement, Vánky travelled widely, collecting and investigating smut fungi in about 55 countries all over the world.[7] The collecting trips were very often combined with national or international workshops, conferences or congresses in the field of mycology, where he was lecturer or speaker. Between 1989 and 2009 his German wife, Christine, helped him in collecting and taking photos of smutted plants.[1]

Over 60 years Vánky amassed the largest smut fungus collection in the world, Herbarium Ustilaginales Vánky (HUV), containing over 22,000 samples. In August 2013 it was relocated to the Queensland Plant Pathology Herbarium, Brisbane, Australia (‘BRIP’), and placed at the disposal of the mycological community.[8]

Vánky lectured in Hungary. He donated a complete set (no. 1-1350) of his Smut fungus exsiccata, and several hundreds of duplicates, between them numerous precious isotypes, as well as all of his smut fungus books and publications to the Hungarian Natural History Museum.

Interviews, awards and honours

In June 1996 an interview with Vánky entitled "Egy világutazó székely füvész" (A world travelling Székely botanist) was published in A Természet Világa (The World of Nature).[9] The Romanian journal Moeszia - Erdélyi Gombász (Transylvanian Mycologist) published two interviews and a laudation on the Székely-Hungarian scientist.[10][11] In 2012 he was awarded the "Pázmány Dénes Award" of the 'Kálmán László Mycological Society', Transylvania (Romania).

A new genus of smut fungi, Vankya, was named in his honour[12] and several new species Orphanomyces vankyi Savile (1974),[13] Anthracoidea vankyi Nannfeldt (1977),[14] Uromyces vankyorum R. Berndt (2002) and Tilletia vankyi Carris & Castlebury (2007) were named for him.[15][16]

He became honorary member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences in the Biological Sciences section in 2001.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Smut fungi of Australia". Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, Queensland Government. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  2. Vánky, Kalman (1985). "Carpathian Ustilaginales". Symbolae Botanicae. 24 (2): 1–309.
  3. Vánky, Kalman (2012). Smut Fungi of the World. APS Press. p. 1480. ISBN 9780890543986.
  4. Sharma, N.D. (10 May 2012). "Smut Fungi of the World" (PDF). Book Reviews. Current Science. 102 (9): 1316–1318.
  5. "Smut Fungi of the World". Book reviews. Fungal Diversity. 59 (1): 179–197. 15 March 2013.
  6. Vánky, Kalman (2013). Illustrated Genera of Smut Fungi (3 ed.). APS Press. p. 288. ISBN 9780890544280.
  7. Vánky, Kalman. "Collecting Trips". Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  8. "Australia gets world's biggest smut collection" (pdf). Brisbane: Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre. 20 November 2013.
  9. Horvath, Gabor (June 1996). "Egy világutazó székely füvész" [A world travelling Székely botanist] (PDF). A Természet Világa (in Hungarian). 127 (12): 250–254.
  10. Győző, Zsigmond (2013). "Világutazó székely-magyar tudós – Két interjú Vánky Kálmánnal" [Two Interviews with the Székely-Hungarian Scientist Kálmán Vánky] (pdf). Moeszia (in Hungarian). 7–8: 66–72.
  11. Győző, Zsigmond (2013). "Vánky Kálmán laudációja" [Laudation of Kálmán Vánky] (pdf). Moeszia (in Hungarian). 7–8: 73.
  12. Ershad, J. (2000). "Vankya, a new genus of smut fungi". Rostaniha. 1 (1–4): 151 161.
  13. Savile, D.B.O. (1974). "Orphanomyces, a new genus of cypericolous smuts". Canadian Journal of Botany. 52 (2): 341–343. doi:10.1139/b74-045.
  14. Nannfeldt, J.A. (1977). "The species of Anthracoidea (Ustilaginales)on Carex subgen. Vignea with special regard to the Nordic species". Botaniska Notiser. 130 (4): 351–375.
  15. Berndt, R. (2002). "Uromyces vankyorum spec. nov. and Uromyces atriplicis, putative vicariant rust species of Patagonian and Australian semi-desert biomes". Mycological Progress. 1 (2): 179–186. doi:10.1007/s11557-006-0017-8.
  16. Carris, LM1; Castlebury, LA; Huang, G; Alderman, SC; Luo, J; Bao, X (December 2007). "Tilletia vankyi, a new species of reticulate-spored bunt fungus with non-conjugating basidiospores infecting species of Festuca and Lolium". Mycol Res. 111 (12): 1386–98. doi:10.1016/j.mycres.2007.09.008.
  17. IPNI.  Vánky.

External links

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