tomato harvest - Barbara Blanco-Ulate

About Us

What We Do

The Department of Plant Sciences engages in teaching, research and outreach in all aspects of agricultural and environmental plant science. Our programs cover the full spectrum of the land-grant university tradition of scholarship, ranging from fundamental discovery to application of research findings to delivery of research-based knowledge and new technology to end users. By integrating basic and applied sciences, our teaching, research, and outreach programs are highly effective in training students and addressing theoretical and technological frontiers in plant sciences.

Our Mission

  • Develop students into scholars, mentors, and responsible citizens of California, the United States and the world
  • Advance, integrate, evaluate and communicate knowledge of plant sciences from lab to field, rangeland, forest, parks, waterways and beyond – using and improving plants to feed, clothe, fuel, restore and beautify the planet
  • Seek out, anticipate and lead in addressing the agricultural, ecological and environmental needs of industry, governmental agencies, communities and people throughout our world

Department History

The Department of Plant Sciences was created in 2004 by consolidating the four commodity-based departments of Agronomy and Range Science, Pomology, Vegetable Crops and Environmental Horticulture. This pooling of personnel and resources fostered a better focus on the teaching, research and outreach missions of one of the country's leading academic programs in agricultural and environmental sciences.

Under the umbrella of Plant Sciences, faculty members collaborate on education and research in the emerging programmatic areas of plant and environmental sciences. Fundamental advances in genomics, genetics, plant physiology, evolutionary biology and environmental science have translated into improvements in crop performance and production, postharvest quality, agricultural sustainability, and ecosystem management. These research-based advances are necessary to maintain California's agricultural economy at the forefront of the world, to foster agricultural and environmental sustainability and to ensure a safe and healthy food supply.

Diversity and Cooperation

This powerhouse of plant sciences can only be achieved through people working together. Our excellent faculty have won a significant number of accolades, including three women faculty members being named as fellows of AAAS, with congratulations to Valerie Eviner, Dina St. Clair and Maeli Melotto, alongside Mary Cadenasso elected as a fellow by the Ecological Society of America. 

The Barbara D Webster Scholar Award was created to advance women in Plant Sciences, with the inaugural award going to Jennifer Funk, who was working to inspire school children in plant sciences, and the second to Louise Ferguson to develop a leadership program to help our plant science junior faculty to achieve their full potential. 

The highest academic accolade—the competitive award of an endowed chair—was achieved by two women—the previous Chair, Gail Taylor, holder of the John B Orr Endowment in Environmental Plant Sciences, and Amelie Gaudin, who now holds the endowed Chair in Agroecology. This was a first for women in Plant Sciences. In 2024, five women held endowed chairs, the first time in the department’s history that so many women have attained this prestigious distinction.