The report highlighted the Nashulai Maasai Conservancy in Kenya
The report highlighted the Nashulai Maasai Conservancy in Kenya AFP

Human societies need a radical overhaul to stop the destruction of the planet, according to the UN biodiversity expert panel's "transformative change" report released Wednesday.

The assessment, the second by the expert panel this week, says overconsumption in richer countries, a concentration of wealth and power, and a society increasingly disconnected from nature, were driving ecological destruction.

It ideas of how to respond to "biodiversity loss, nature's decline and the projected collapse of key ecosystem functions".

Taking action will be difficult -- but not impossible, the report said.

"It is not just governments. It is not just business. It is not just civil society. It is all of us. We all need to work together," said Arun Agrawaln, one of the lead authors of the report from the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES).

Here are three examples of successful transformations, big and small, according to IPBES.

In 2002 Spain suffered what was at the time its worst environmental disaster, when the Prestige oil tanker broke in two, spilling fuel that blackened swathes of the Atlantic coastline.

Fishing communities in Galicia responded to the devastation by pioneering a new way to manage a marine reserve, with fishers, scientists and the local authorities working together.

The "Os Minarzos" reserve model was "not without tensions", IPBES said.

But more than 17 years later, the area has better fishing practices, more species and higher incomes -- as well as improved trust and cooperation.

It also inspired new guidelines for the UN's agriculture body and a network of more than 20 million fishers in Europe and across parts of North and South America.

China's largest private tree planting project, Ant Forest, is a mobile phone application that rewards users for climate friendly activities.

The app boasts that 500 million people have used its programme, which gives users "green energy points" for things like walking or cycling to work instead of driving, and cutting down on plastic and paper.

The points grow into a virtual tree, which Ant Forest matches by planting a real tree.

"Recognising a wide range of ecological and social goals, the plants are suited to specific contexts and provide jobs in eco-agriculture and ecotourism in remote rural areas facing environmental degradation in China," the report said.

Since its launch in 2016, the project has planted 548 million trees in 13 provinces.

Traditional knowledge from indigenous peoples and local communities is a key aspect of the report, which highlighted the Nashulai Maasai Conservancy in Kenya.

IPBES said this "represents a new model for conservation", which tries to tackle a range of issues together, including species loss, incomes and climate change.

The conservancy involves community-managed protected areas, as well as activities like river cleaning and tree planting.

IPBES said the project has succeeded in creating areas "where both humans and wildlife thrive".

"Over a very short period of time, biodiversity reappeared," said Karen O'Brien, another of the lead authors of the report.

"The power of community, again and again in our examples, is important."