I can say a few words about that. I think there has been some work done to show that obviously the more stress that bees are under in terms of transportation and confinement on transport trucks, and in terms of moving from agricultural commodity to agricultural commodity, the more it can be very hard on bees in terms of spreading diseases and whatnot.
At the same time, bees can also be very healthy in those situations. I've been involved with a couple of pretty big honeybee studies that were looking at the question of neonics and canola. We intensively collected data in terms of monitoring the bees, including measuring different endpoints, their reproduction, their weight, and the numbers of adults, and collecting samples for disease, surveillance, and whatnot. The bees still do very well, and those were very stressful conditions where it was very hot. Any given colony may have been open for even an hour, and our bees were quite strong and vigorous. In one of the studies, the overwintering mortality was very low.
Even though those things can stress bees, the bees are also quite resilient and can power through that type of monitoring.