Our study specialties in woody ornamentals, floriculture, fruits and vegetables – each a branch of horticulture, and each involving commercial production – have been combined into one track in our new science concentration: Production Horticulture.
The focus is on the practical aspects of plant production.
Examples of jobs obtained by our graduates
Graduates of the Production Horticulture track enter a wide variety of productive careers. These include agribusinesses; agricultural extension and outreach; education (community colleges, high schools); professional consulting on horticultural or agronomic topics.

Curriculum (year-by-year listing of courses in this concentration for freshman, sophomore, junior and senior years)
College of Agricultural Sciences & Natural Resources section of the UT Undergraduate Catalog; the Department of Plant Sciences is the last department listed in this pdf document (scroll down).
Landscape Design & Construction
Public Horticulture
Turfgrass Science & Management
Plant Science, Biotechnology & Horticulture