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Mother Nature
aka: Mother Earth

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The arch-Nature Spirit of Earth... or whatever planet is the story's setting. May or may not have a humanoid form (substitute "humanoid" with whatever species equivalent in non-terrestrial settings), but if it is, it's Always Female due to Mother Nature, Father Science. Tends to dress in a Garden Garment and leave a trail of flowers where their Fertile Feet tread, specially if Nature Equals Plants is in effect.

Of course, if you actually look at old cultures Mother Nature tends to occur mainly in fertile places, and infertile parts of the world often had male Earth deities. Egypt had Geb, for instance, and the Norse had Ymir and Freyja.

Often a bona fide Physical God, if not outright one of the Powers That Be. Actually pissing her off is likely to result in Gaia's Vengeance (also compare Nature Is Not a Toy), while making her sad can result in Gaia's Lament. If she also created the world, she overlaps with Mother Goddess; if she is merely human but with a gift for gardening and horticulture, an Earth Mother.

When Mother Nature isn't exactly the ideal mother, see Nature Is Not Nice. See also Water Is Womanly. Some Pastoral Science Fiction may use this trope.


Examples:

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    Advertising 
  • Ads for Always feminine-hygiene products have Mother Nature as a woman in a green tweed skirtsuit approaching young women with a red "gift"... and usually getting her ass kicked as the voiceover says "Outsmart Mother Nature."
  • In 2023, Apple made a promotional video where its environmental team and CEO Tim Cook report about the company's carbon footprint results to Mother Nature, who has a human form (played by Octavia Spencer).
  • There was a commercial campaign for Chiffon margarine in the 1970s that had a Mother Nature (Dena Dietrich). "It's not nice to fool Mother Nature!" *thunderclap*

    Arts 
  • Sleeping Venus (Giorgione): The curves of Venus's body mimic the rolling, lush hills of the landscape behind her, with Giorgione depicting her sleeping out in the open to show that she it in a harmonious relationship with the landscape.

    Comic Books 
  • Arawn: After everything is over, Siahm goes to live in the forest where she is protected from Arawn's wrath by the goddess of nature, fertility, and women. She also resurrects Kern as a forest god each time Arawn tries to kill him in revenge.
  • The Heap: A later retcon of the Heap's origin is that as he was lying in the swamp, mortally wounded but refusing to die, the goddess Ceres came to his aid, and decided to save him from death by transforming him into her champion against evil. Later retellings change Ceres into the more generic Mother Nature.
  • Judge Dredd: Gender Flipped; a mutant named Father Earth (who appears to be equal parts plant and human) leads an attack against Mega-City One to enact Gaia's Vengeance upon it. He ends up hypnotized and eaten by a giant carnivorous plant.
  • Marvel Universe:
    • Gaea is a Composite Character of every single nature goddess from multiple cultures, with many aliases.
    • According to Nina the Conjuror in Marvel's Voices: Comunidades, the spirit of the earth is fairly universal. The protective deer being she knows as Anhangá is also known in Estonia as Metsik, and in Japan as the kodama. Once Nina gets through to it, it appears to her as a winged, green-skinned woman who resembles a fairy.
  • Shaman's Tears: Joshua Brand is empowered by Wakan Takan; the "Great Spirit" of the Sioux. It usually manifests as sexy Native American woman.

    Fan Works 
  • Abraxas (Hrodvitnon): This trope was implied in canon in regards to Mothra, and in this fic it gets more explicit confirmation. Mothra's POV describes her as being the mother to all life on Earth, with an otherworldly awareness of the processes of life, death and Reincarnation. She considers the Many as an Undead Abomination of Ghidorah's making to be an utter blasphemy to nature which she will not tolerate absorbing her children into a Fate Worse than Death.
  • Blood and Revolution has a genderflpped version: the "earthkami" — Anthropomorphic Personification of the Earth itself — is Darien Shields (Prince Endymion) from Sailor Moon. He's explicitly refered to as the Egyptian Geb as well, and implied to be all earth gods/goddesses from human mythologies.
  • Empath: The Luckiest Smurf: Mother Nature is basically the same as the cartoon show version, though her name is now invoked in prayers by the Smurfs for blessings and such. Just don't ask her what she does about gay people. Her Mirror Universe counterpart, though, is more of a sex goddess that its Smurfs honor with prayers for doing whatever it is they want to do, and with whomever they want.
  • Mythology 101 Cycle: Terra, the Mother Goddess, who is the Ethical Slut version.
  • Pony POV Series: The title belongs to Princess Gaia, Fluttershy's future alicorn self. Mother Deer has been keeping stewardship of one of her duties till Gaia is around to cover it.
  • Return of the Guardians: Empress Natellusia or Lusie looks like an Ambiguously Brown little girl with an Unlimited Wardrobe of immaculate white clothes, and her only power is to communicate with all forms of life, but since the Earth wants to do Lusie's bidding, the kid commands plant life, animals, weather and Ether, the sparkly building blocks of creation. Like Mother Nature in Joyce's original books, she is also Pitch Black's long-lost daughter.
  • Waiting for Rain -- Kida & Pocahontas is a fanvid where Kida is a Physical God and the embodiment of nature. Pocahontas meets her and befriends her, but Kida ends up kidnapped by colonizers.

    Films — Animation 
  • Moana has Te Fiti, the Goddess of Life who created every island on Earth. She is presented as a giant woman with green flora covering her body. When she goes to sleep she becomes the Mother Island.
  • The Year Without a Santa Claus: Mother Nature is the mother of the Miser Brothers (Snow Miser and Heat Miser), the two beings who control the Earth's temperatures and weather. While she's described as The Dreaded, she's revealed to be a pleasant, grandmotherly Reasonable Authority Figure... though the fact that she can scare both of her sons into listening to her probably makes her reputation warranted.

    Literature 
  • The Book of Eve: The Mother is a feminine deity associated with the untamed, fertile, natural world. She often manifests her power through eruptions of vegetation, like when she causes the crucifix in the chapel to sprout leaves and the crown of thorns to bloom. She transforms her faithful into animals and plants.
  • Brother Eagle, Sister Sky: His grandmother taught Seattle that the earth is the mother of humanity, that what befalls her will also befall her children and that these lessons must be passed down from generation to generation.
  • Dora Wilk Series: The Goddess is apparently connected to Earth and is worshiped as the supreme deity of magicals (even though they have many, many, many lesser gods). It's apparently a counterbalance of heaven and hell's more mystical God, although the two seem to be on good terms.
  • The Dresden Files: The are two characters that fulfill this role: Queen Mother Summer and Queen Mother Winter. They are the oldest and strongest fairies of their courts. Each has ultimate domain over her domain but generally remain neutral to any scuffle their daughters Queen Titania of Summer and Queen Mab of Winter or the lower fae start.
  • Drinking Midnight Wine: The character of Gale, AKA Gaia, turns out to be the Anthropomorphic Personification of nature and earth.
  • At one point in his journey through The Magic Map, David encounters Mother Earth, along with Father Atlas. She considers humanity her adopted children, while her actual children are the various landforms of the Living Map.
  • Malazan Book of the Fallen: The Sleeping Goddess Burn is very literally the world the characters walk on and referred to as the "Mother Goddess".
  • The Silmarillion: Yavanna, the Vala charged with guarding the living things of the earth and the creator of animals and plants. She was responsible for the creation of the Ents, having petitioned Eru for their inclusion into the world to protect the forests from the depredations of humans, dwarves and orcs.
  • The Stormlight Archive: Cultivation, one of the sixteen Shards of Adonalsium, fits quite well with this trope. The spren call her "Mother," as do the few humans who get a chance to meet her. While she spends most of her time hiding in her sacred valley and watching over the plants there, she does occasionally affect the rest of the world. In Oathbringer, it is revealed that she gave Dalinar his boon (instead of her daughter the Nightwatcher), which ultimately led to Dalinar growing into a person strong enough to resist Odium.
    Cultivation: I control all things that can be grown, nurtured. That includes the thorns.
  • Survivor Dogs: Dogs and wolves believe in the Earth-Dog, a giant black-furred and mastiff-like dog that lives in the earth. She is treated much like Mother Nature, but there are also other Spirit Dogs that rule over things like the ocean. The Earth-Dog causes earthquakes and claims bodies after death. Dogs often bury their prey as offerings to her.
  • The Traitor Son Cycle: The Wild creatures and the Outwallers, as well as some of the hillmen, worship goddess Tara, the personification of nature and the Wild. In truth, Tar is a dragoness, who, while gifted with some Green Thumb powers, isn't really Mother Earth.

    Live-Action TV 

    Mythology and Religion 
  • The "mother (earth) goddess" figures in many Real Life religions and mythologies, many of which are Older Than Dirt, are the Trope Maker.
  • Mesopotamian Mythology has a few of these, and they probably constitute the oldest known examples of this trope in history.
    • The consort of Anu, the supreme god of the pantheon, is explicitly an earth goddess, though the name differs depending on the place (she's called Uras or Ki in Sumerian, and Antu in Akkadian). Unlike her husband, she is mentioned very little in surviving writings, and some doubt that she was ever worshipped.
    • Ninhursag is a more prominent example, being a mother goddess who symbolizes mountains and fertility of living things, including humankind. All Sumerian kings were said to be "nourished by Ninhursag's milk".
  • Classical Mythology: Gaia, the mother of the Titans and Greek gods. Decidedly more of the vengeful persuasion, though usually it's because some god or titan gave her cause first.
  • Egyptian Mythology: Gender flipped with Geb the Earth Father and Nut the Sky Mother.
  • Poetic Edda: Gerðr, a giantess courted by Frey with the aid of Skirnir. The story is part of a fertility ritual in which Gerðr represents Earth, Frey fertility, and Skirnir sunlight.
  • Taíno Mythology: Atabey is the goddess of fresh water and fertility, who also represents the spirit of earth.
  • Prithvi is the goddess of earth in the Vedic religion, the consort of Dyaus Pita, the god of sky. In Hinduism (which developed out of the Vedic religion), she is known as Bhumi, the divine mother of Sita.
  • Mat Zemlya, the earth goddess in Slavic Mythology.
  • Žemyna from Lithuanian mythology mixes the Mother Earth aspect with The Grim Reaper, as she is also the keeper of dead souls. Her Latvian counterpart, Māra, is regarded the same way.
  • Scythian Mythology: Api, goddess of the Earth and water, whom the Scythians depicted as having plant feet. She also represented birthing and fertility more broadly. Myths held that she gave birth to all the very first living things. Api remained aloof and indifferent after this however, much like nature is often viewed as being.

    Tabletop Games 
  • Pathfinder: The Green Mother is a particularly dark take on this concept. She's a beautiful Plant Person closely tied to the natural world and plant life specifically — but she embodies the darker, more primal aspects of nature, especially ones pertaining to lust, allure and death, such as the urge calling salmon to spawn and die or the mantis' drive to consume her mate.

    Video Games 
  • Albion: Animebona is the spirit of the eponymous planet, and the entity representing magic in Dji-Kantos philosophy.
  • Endless Legend: Auriga is the narrator and planetary setting of the game. She simultaneously sees hope and despair in the life and civilizations dwelling on her, because she knows she is slowly dying, turning into an icy wasteland.
  • Fire Emblem Heroes features Ymir, the dragon of life, who once watched over her realm which was known as the realm of life. Unfortunately, she and the other inhabitants of Ymir were no match for Hel, the ruler of the realm of the dead, and now she only lives as a spirit inside of her remaining descendant, Eir.
  • Horizon Zero Dawn: Invoked by the head of the Zero Dawn project, Elizabet Sobek. In order to save the world from a Robot Uprising or rather, re-create the biosphere from scratch after the unstoppable Faro Plague finished consuming everything bigger than a bacteria, she built GAIA, an artificial intelligence with a love for living things and the infrastructure needed to manage the ecosystem on a global scale. She even designed GAIA's holographic avatar to fit this trope, presenting as an African woman in a toga.
  • Kid Icarus: Uprising introduces Viridi, the goddess of nature. She loathes Mankind, and due to the results of Hades' Evil Plan the chapter prior to her debut, she decides they don't deserve to live anymore.
  • Mortal Kombat 11: Cetrion is an Elder Goddess who commands the four classical elements of nature. She has green hair resembling seaweed and wears a dress made of green teal and plant matter.
  • Overlord: The Mother Goddess is the deity of the Elves and a nature goddess of sorts as well as a standard Goddess of Good. Her priestesses gorge themselves to shape themselves in her image.
  • Pajama Sam: Mother Nature is the president of World Wide Weather.
  • Shin Megami Tensei: Strange Journey has Mem Aleph the mother of everything that has existed on earth. Including the human soul and the demons/old gods. She unleashes the Schwarzwelt upon the earth because man has polluted the earth so badly that in order to save it she will wipe out mankind like she did the sentient lifeforms and civilizations that existed before humanity.
  • A Very Long Rope to the Top of the Sky: The Lydian religion has God with two children; one of them, "the Mother", gave birth to the world, while the other, "The Eater", was a lazy hedonist who only devoured his sister's creations.
  • In Genshin Impact, "Lesser Lord" Kusanali is the resident Nature Goddess (or in the words of the game, the Archon of Dendro) as well as the God of Wisdom who rules over the nation of Sumeru (at least nominally).

    Web Animation 
  • Fauna Ceres of hololive EN's second generation, otherwise known as the Council, is classified as the "Keeper of Nature" note . She presides over all organic life aside from humanity, which had left nature behind a long-ass time ago... and she's not exactly a happy camper about it, having developed Yandere tendencies towards both humanity and the Guardian of Civilization, Mumei Nanashi, wanting her to quit said position and stay with her forever.

    Webcomics 
  • Aurora (2019): As the Life primordial is the origin and embodiment of life energy, her essence is within every living thing on the planet and she gets very angry when people mutate creatures with her power.
  • Unsounded has Mother Yerta, the eternally pregnant goddess who nurtures the world in her womb. Her iconography is also prominently featured in tombs, since Gefendur scripture holds that human bodies are gifts to be returned to Yerta upon death. Also in one brothel, for people who want to be a bit more personal in their devotions.

    Web Original 
  • Critical Role: The Wildmother Melora embodies nature as a whole, and is often portrayed as a warm, maternal woman made of plant matter. She's said to exist in every living thing, and Caduceus, one of her worshipers, has been tasked with ensuring that those who die are buried properly to give their bodies back to the earth.
  • SCP Foundation:
    • SCP-1547-A and -B's mother is a villainous example, and considers complex thought to be a bad thing that should be removed from the world.
    • SCP-4043 is a hive mind of all life on the planet who can influence said life to help it prosper. She was, anyway, until the mass extinctions caused by human activities killed her, exacerbating said extinction. The Foundation tried to revive her artificially, only to end up with essentially the embodiment of Nature Is Not Nice which was specifically hostile to humans. They killed this and transformed a member of the Foundation into a third version.

    Western Animation 
  • Summer Memories: Mother Nature is a recurring character in the show, depicted as a green plant-woman with a masculine voice who regularly gives advice to Jason and Tim.

 
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Moana Myth Prologue

Moana's grandmother explains the mythology that will guide the movie.

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