You're probably talking in the range, for the live gene banks, of a couple of hundred thousand dollars a year to maintain them for the 32 populations that are present in those areas. I would hope as well we'd begin to address some of the core problems, such as the habitat issue. They're disappearing somewhere out in the ocean.
Canada has already made a stab, kind of indirectly, towards that. Canada is a world leader in a technology called sonic telemetry. Various firms in this country have developed the ability to track animals out into the oceans. Through the Canada Foundation for Innovation international joint ventures fund and funding from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, a project called the “Ocean Tracking Network”, based at Dalhousie University, is beginning to wire critical points of the world's oceans and would be able to detect fish marked with those tags. Some of that OTN tracking ability is going to go into the Bay of Fundy, with the specific goal of trying to look at these endangered Atlantic salmon. What we have to do is get the additional funding to put into some of the fish coming out of these rivers so that we can track them into those areas, and that's probably going to be a couple of hundred thousand dollars a year as well, just for the technologies.