Technically, the Roman goddess Diana was the goddess of nature, as well as of fertility childbirth, wildwood, moon, forests, animals, mountains, woods, women, and the moon. She was variously known as Mother of Creatures, the Huntress or Destroyer, and Goddess of the hunt.
However, other gods/goddesses often had specific realms of nature that they governed. For example(s), Ceres was goddess of corn and grain crops; Jupiter was the god of the sky, lightning, and thunder; Neptune was god of the sea and its creatures; and Mars (far from being only "God of War") was also god of spring, growth in nature, and agriculture.
the god of nature and flocks is Pan, or Faunus in Roman Mythology
Pan--Greek mythology
Ceres--a goddess in Greek mythology
Durga--the mother goddess in Indian mythology
They didn't have a God of birds.
Pan. He was also the god of nature in general. Pan was the Greek god. His Roman counterpart was Faunus.
Saturn was the Roman god of Agriculture and the Harvest, while Ceres was goddess of nature and the fertility of the earth.
It depends upon the religion. Most likely the one you are looking for is Dionysos or Bacchus, the Greek god of wine. The Roman god of wine, Liber, was later assimilated with Dionysus.
The Greek god of nature, and the wild was Pan. He was a creature known as a satyr. His Roman counterpart was the god Faunus.
The Roman God Neptune is the God of the sea.
God is singular in nature.
There is no Roman god for "worse".
How is the nature of God in Judaism different from God in Christianity
Mars was a Roman god. He was the God of War.
In Roman mythology, he is the blacksmith god, or the god of the forges.
"ROMAN god" did not discover Jupiter. it is named after roman god...JUpiter