Landscape design: Graduates of horticulture programs can design and maintain landscapes for residential and commercial properties.
Nursery management: Graduates can manage nurseries that grow and sell plants.
Greenhouse management: Graduates can manage greenhouses that produce plants for sale or research.
Arboriculture: Graduates can care for trees, including pruning, pest control, and disease management.
Urban forestry: Graduates can manage trees in urban environments, including planting, pruning, and pest control.
Sustainable agriculture: Graduates can use sustainable practices to grow crops and manage farmland.
Floriculture: Graduates can grow and sell flowers for commercial purposes.
Turfgrass management: Graduates can manage turfgrass for sports fields, golf courses, and other facilities.
Horticulture therapy: Graduates can use plants and gardening to help people with disabilities or illnesses.
Research: Graduates can conduct research on plants, plant diseases, and horticultural practices.
In addition to these careers, a bachelor's degree in horticulture can also provide a foundation for careers in other fields, such as:
* Environmental science
* Natural resource management
* Agriculture
* Forestry
* Botany
* Plant pathology
* Food science
* Landscape architecture
The specific jobs that a graduate with a bachelor's degree in horticulture can get will depend on their interests, skills, and experience.