One of the things I don't think we've done enough of is to look at the genetics.
It's interesting. We've gone a long way. The genetics has been driven by the genetics companies, the companies that sell the genetic aspects, and their clients want more production, faster growth, that sort of thing. Now they're starting to run into problems with that, and we've started to look at other ways.
It's not just Canada or North America; it's worldwide. There are things that are as simple as whether there are genetic relationships between a layer in a conventional.... That goes into the non-conventional cages, the new types of housing. They're finding that they get really nasty in there. They fight. They pick on each other. They have to have different ways to handle those.
One of the things we're looking at through our clusters is whether there are genetic relationships there. If we can discover something like that, then we can work with our breeding to move this stuff worldwide. On that sort of thing, I think there's a lot that we can do.