Yes. GFO is supporting it. I mentioned our partners in that, but basically the research is being run by Tracey Baute, an entomologist with the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, and Dr. Art Schaafsma, who is with the University of Guelph. They are overseeing this research. Certainly it has started, because I've consulted with them and helped them find corn farmers and beekeepers and have put them in touch in terms of doing it. This is practical field research; it's not exclusively lab research.
Basically, we're determining the presence of bees and flowering plants in and around cornfields, and we're doing a measurement there, as well as determining the time of corn planting and how pollinator exposure to pesticide-contaminated dust can be reduced, so we're looking at the equipment. Also, we're determining the role of the seed lubricants—talc was mentioned, and certainly graphite as well—in the production of pesticide contamination and dust during corn planting. We're trying to measure a number of factors and do it in the field, in a practical farming application area.
With OMAF, the Agricultural Adaptation Council, and a partner out of the United States that is working with us, the Pollinator Partnership, we've put together $340,000 that is dedicated over the next two years to that study.