The eradication of wild boar is going to be a many-year process, depending on the province. I think the population is such in Quebec and Ontario that it might be eradicated quite quickly. They have a little bit more of an extensive range in western Canada. It's going to be a little more of a challenge. In your home province you got rid of the rats, so you're presumably going to figure out how to get rid of some wild pigs.
We're going to have animal activist problems regardless of what we do. When we're dealing with an invasive species and the harm that it is wreaking on the environment, we might have to set aside animal rights guys and think a little bit more about the environmental perspective in Canada. From our perspective, there is the disease issues that fall from wild pigs.
Eradication of them directly is going to require some new science. Quite frankly...and perhaps manage the populations a little bit easier. Clearly, running a bunch of hunters into the field and chasing them around is not going to get the job done. It'll take a little more of a sophisticated strategic approach to clearly identify where they are, get them trapped and take out the entire sounder, one at a time.
It will be a lengthy process for sure. In the interim, there are a number of steps that need to be taken in terms of how we do a better job at biosecurity with our smaller holdings—places that might have outdoor pigs—where you could see that interaction. I think there are some opportunities to improve there as well.