All our tests are on farmers' fields. Our program will be directly linked to questions growers bring to our company, and everything will be done in those situations where they're having crop losses. The idea will be to get an idea of the distribution of pathogens across the field and how they relate to A&L's business of looking at chemical fertility. We want to have a very good map of what is going on as far as these high yielding sites in the field versus those that are low yielding.
To some extent, the work is very much related to organic production. We call it ecological agriculture because we are looking at the scientific basis of what makes a plant highly productive versus one that's low in production. But our focus, believe it or not, will be on a healthy plant, not a sick plant.
Again, this is something that's very hard to get funding for. Nobody wants to study a healthy human and nobody wants to study a healthy plant.