12 Plant Physiology 



utilizes and advances these or any other sciences which 

 may assist in deducing the facts of plant life. Just as 

 chemistry may utilize the plant as an indicator of chemical 

 reaction or chemical fact, so physiology may use or develop 

 chemical facts in analyzing the phenomena of plant life. 



In general, a study of physiology must assume or in- 

 clude facts regarding the form and structure of plants; 

 that is, morphology and histology. The more elaborate 

 the morphology of an organism, as a rule, the more special- 

 ized and intricate are its reactions. These reactions are 

 those of its constituent units, and the cell is a convenient 

 and necessary unit of structure. The cell is likewise an im- 

 portant physiological unit, and as such requires special con- 

 sideration. 



REFERENCE BOOKS AND TEXTS 1 



BAILEY, L. H. Cyclopedia of American Agriculture. 1 : 618 pp., 



756 figs., 25 pis., 1907 ; 2 : 699 pp., 907 figs.; 19 pis., 1907. 

 BARNES, C. R. Physiology (in Coulter, Barnes, and Cowles, 



College Botany, Part II), pp. 297-i84, figs. 619-699, 1910. 

 CLEMENTS, F. E. Research Methods in Ecology. 334 pp., 85 



figs., 1905. 



Plant Physiology and Ecology. 315 pp., 125 figs., 1907. 



CURTIS, C. C. Nature and Development of Plants. 471 pp., 



342 figs., 1907. 

 DARWIN, F., and ACTON, E. H. Practical Physiology of Plants. 



321 pp., 43 figs., 1894. 

 DETMER, W. Practical Plant Physiology. (Transl. by S. A. 



Moor.) 555 pp., 118 figs., 1898. 



1 In this list of reference works it is intended to include some of the 

 more useful texts and general works which contain physiological infor- 

 mation along many lines. Other books of greater specialization are in- 

 cluded under the selected references for particular topics. 



