Thank you for the question.
I can't speak to the spotted lanternfly specifically, but I can follow up with the committee on plans regarding that invasive species specifically.
In general, the way we approach invasive species is that once we get information from Environment and Climate Change Canada or Agriculture Canada or the CFIA, we convert that into direction to our frontline officers. That direction to frontline officers takes the form of indicators or things to look for. Those could be things on boats. They could be things in wood packaging or pests that are inside containers—all of those different modes or vectors by which goods and pests could arrive.
Once the officers look at the risk of the goods that are arriving and conduct a progressive exam—they look deeper, depending on what they are seeing—then they detain the goods and seek advice if they don't fully understand what's in front of them. If they do fully understand what they have and it is regarded as an invasive species, then they reject its entry or they move to seize and have it destroyed.