BOOKS BY JOHN M. COULTER, A.1VL, Ph^D,, 



Head of Department of Botany, University of Chicago. 



Plant Relations. A First Book of Botany. i2mo. 



Cloth, $i.io. 



"Plant Relations" is the first part of the botanical section of Biology, 

 and as its title indicates, treats what might be termed the human interebts 

 of plant life the conditions under which plants grow, their means of adapta- 

 tion to environments, how they protect themselves from enemies of various 

 kinds in their struggle for existence, their habits individually and in family 

 groups, and their relations to other forms of life— all of which constitute the 

 economic and sociological phases of plant study. 



Plant Structures. A Second Book of Botany. i2mo. 



Cloth, $1.20. 

 This volume treats of the structural and morphological features of P^^nt 

 life and plant growth. It is intended to follow " Plant Relations, by the 

 same author, but may precede this book, and either may be used independ- 

 ently for a half-year's work in botanical study. " Plant Structures is not 

 intended for a laboratory guide, but a book for study m connection with 

 laboratory work. 



Plant Studies. An Elementary Botany. i2mo. Cloth, 



Si. 25. 



This book is designed for those schools in which there is not a sufficient 

 allotment of time to permit the development of plant Ecology and Morphol- 

 ogy as outUned in " Plant Relations " and " Plant Structures," and yet which 

 are desirous of imparting instruction from both points of view. 



Plants. A Text-Book of Botany. i2mo. Cloth, $1.80. 



Many of the high schools as well as the smaller colleges and seminaries 

 that devote one year to botanical work prefer a single volume covering the 

 complete course of study. For their convenience, therefore. Plant KeJa- 

 tions " and " Plant Structures " have been bound together m one book, under 

 the title of " Plants." 



An Analytical Key to some of the Common Wild 

 and Cultivated Species of Flowermg Plants. 



i2mo. Limp cloth, 25 cents. 

 An analytical key and guide to the common flora of the Northern and 

 Eastern States, as its title indicates. May be used with any text-book of 

 botany. 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. 



