Andrzej Wiktor (1931âÂÂ2018) was a Polish taxonomist of terrestrial slugs. His considerable research output includes a number of comprehensive reviews that document the slug faunas of particular countries or revise the taxonomy of whole families. He worked for almost all of his career at the Museum of Natural History, University of Wrocà Âaw in Poland.
Andrzej Hubert Wiktor was born 4 February 1931 in Nowa Wieà Â, near Rzeszów, in south-east Poland. He studied biology at Poznaà  University and then at the University of Wrocà Âaw. After completing his doctorate in 1962 while employed at the Wrocà Âaw Medical University, the rest of his career was based at the Museum of Natural History, University of Wrocà Âaw, of which he became Director in 1980. He also held various other prestigious posts in the university and in other academic organisations (e.g. President of the , Corresponding Member of the Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences; full list at ), and only his known opposition to the communist party prevented his appointment as university Rector. He continued his research past his formal retirement in 2002, with his final paper appearing in 2017. He died on the last day of 2018.
Most of Wiktor's scientific output concerned terrestrial slugs, particularly their taxonomy and morphology, with some articles encompassing also terrestrial snails. His 108 publications (bibliography at supplemented in but overlooked ) include books and long monographs dealing comprehensively with the slug fauna of particular countries or revising the taxonomy of entire families. One of his later works was a guidebook to the terrestrial mollusc fauna of Poland. He described about 60 new species (listed in ), but equally valuable is his work synonymising species, usually based on inspecting type specimens in museums. Most articles were written in English or German, with a few in Polish or Russian, and are illustrated by his own drawings. He was a keen traveller and collector of slugs, mostly in Europe but even as far afield as China and Papua New Guinea, so that Wrocà Âaw now has a uniquely rich collection. His obituaries emphasise his kindness and generosity to young scientists.
Wiktor was the youngest of four siblings; their father was a landowner but the family were expelled from their land after the communist take-over. His eldest brother, Józef, also became a professor of biology. Andrzej married Jadwiga Kwiecià Âska in 1954. She died in 1997, and in 2002 he married Hanna Mizgajska. Both his wives were parasitologists and his daughter an anthropologist.
Wiktor was a religious man. He is buried in the cemetery of in Wrocà Âaw, together with his first wife and her mother.