Thank you for that.
I want to go to another area here, a different direction.
Part of our objective here is conserving; it's connecting, restoring habitat, and then connecting people to rural areas again. Canadians are increasingly concentrated in urban areas, which brings me to that conflict zone, really, where the rural land and urban areas intersect or interface, as I think you said. You might want to comment on the challenges that presents. In connecting people with rural areas again, can you comment on what kinds of programs exist now to actually get people out of the city in order to understand what is going on in the farm community and about the land issues?
I think you mentioned how many species were on agricultural land. Is it 300 or 500, or something? You mentioned a huge number of species that are found on agricultural land, or one of you did in your presentation. That would be vertebrates. Can you comment on what ideas, what is happening, what could be done to help connect young people and new Canadians, for example, with agricultural and rural areas?