Nature Related- Male (or female)

  1. Argus
    • Origin:

      Greek
    • Meaning:

      "watchful guardian"
    • Description:

      In mythology, a creature with a hundred eyes, making it a better name for a camera than a baby.
  2. Ash
    • Origin:

      Diminutive of Asher, English
    • Meaning:

      "ash tree"
    • Description:

      Ash has Southern charm plus the arboreal-nature appeal. Plus your little boy will prize Ash as the name of the hero of the Pokemon cartoons. Ash can also be a dashing short form of Asher, Ashton, or any other "Ash" name.
  3. Auberon
    • Origin:

      English from German
    • Meaning:

      "noble, bearlike"
    • Description:

      Rarely heard in the US, Auberon has a gentle autumnal feel rare in a male name. Possibly starting as a pet form of Aubrey, it was also infuenced by Oberon, the king of the fairies in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  4. Alder
    • Atoll
      • Bay
        • Origin:

          English word, Old English
        • Meaning:

          "an inlet of the sea where the land curves inward; berry"
        • Description:

          Like River and Lake, a cool, refreshing modern water-related choice. This name is also associated with bay leaves, the bay laurel, the contemporary term of endearment, "bae", and the Old English word beġ meaning "berry"
      • Beck
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "small stream"
        • Description:

          The popular single-named alternative singer (born Bek) has given this cool nature-meets-surname name a new lease of life. Another notable bearer is Beck Weathers, a Texan pathologist who survived the 1996 Mount Everest disaster, which was covered in the book and film Into Thin Air.
      • Benno
        • Origin:

          German
        • Meaning:

          "bear"
        • Description:

          Benno is a cool name in its own right -- there was a tenth century Saint Benno -- though it is also used as a lively nickname for Benjamin. Saint Benno of Meissen is the patron saint of anglers and weavers and, strangely enough, alliteration.
      • Bertram
        • Origin:

          German
        • Meaning:

          "bright raven"
        • Description:

          Old Norman name last current in the 1930s, and firmly in our 'so far out it will always be out' category – despite its appearance as a Hogwarts student in Harry Potter. This is the full first name of P.G. Wodehouse's inimitable Bertie Wooster.
      • Brook
        • Origin:

          English nature name
        • Meaning:

          "small stream"
        • Description:

          Now that the popularity of Brooke is waning, and surname style variant Brooks is on the rise, Brook seems live a newly fresh nature-inspired option.
      • Burl
        • Origin:

          English
        • Meaning:

          "knotty wood; butler"
        • Description:

          This name has a nicely fragrant woodsy feel, bringing it into the nature-tree name category. Its only well-known bearer, folk singer and Oscar-winning actor Burl Ives, had the full birth certificate name of Burl Icle Ivanhoe Ives — nothing compared to his two siblings named Argola and Lillburn.
      • Briar
        • Canyon
          • Origin:

            Spanish word name
          • Description:

            Canyon is a unique baby name evocative of natural splendor and the old Steve Canyon comic-strip heroism, making it an intriguing new word-name possibility.
        • Clay
          • Origin:

            English word name; diminutive of Clayton
          • Description:

            Clay is a rich, earthy one-syllable name with a southern-inflected handsome-rogue image, featured on soap operas and reality TV. Its longer forms are Clayton and Clayborne.
        • Clint
          • Origin:

            English, diminutive of Clinton
          • Description:

            As flinty and steely as Mr. Eastwood.
        • Cove
          • Origin:

            English
          • Meaning:

            "small bay"
          • Description:

            Cove is an up-and-coming nature name whose cool sound and peaceful image saw it rising for both sexes... until COVID-19 hit. It remained steady in use for boys in 2021, but actually increased for girls, although it remains a seriously rare and distinctive choice for either gender.
        • Crane
          • Origin:

            English surname
          • Meaning:

            "crane"
          • Description:

            This elegant surname has great potential to turn into an unusual first name, especially with its literary associations to both Stephen and Hart Crane.
        • Cirrus
          • Coriander
            • Dune
              • Origin:

                English word name
              • Meaning:

                "sand hill"
              • Description:

                Dune is a name of several layers. It's a modern nature name, like Ocean, Bay and Reef, although rarer, conjuring up images of breezy sand dunes on summer beach days.