Great, thank you.
I appreciate the testimony I've heard today. It's quite refreshing. I think all Canadians want to make sure we protect the ecological integrity and biodiversity of our country. I think every witness we've heard would agree with that statement. But I am concerned that the Species at Risk Act.... When you read it, “Species at Risk Act” sounds like a nice title. But if you look at what a species is, it's actually a species, subspecies, variety, or geographically different population. I think this is where we get bogged down in some of these details. Mr. Quinney, I think this is where you addressed it quite well.
I'll give you an example. When I was a fisheries technician in Alberta, we were working on walleye populations. You could argue that in a particular lake, because our lakes are not joined by rivers as much as they are in Ontario, the species of fish in those lakes have been separate from each other for a long enough period of time that one could make the scientific argument that they're distinct genetic populations, regardless of the fact that biologically they could probably interbreed and produce fertile offspring, which is the biological definition of a species.
The Province of Alberta, through its bequeathal of fisheries from the Government of Canada, was responsible for managing those walleye populations, which we did. When fishing pressure got to the point where populations collapsed, we brought in management practices such as a no-catch or a catch-and-release-only on certain species. You know how these things work.
At the same time, as I read this act, and as you correctly point out, anybody paying attention could have made the argument that a species of walleye in a particular isolated lake that was below a certain population level could have qualified to be listed as a species at risk. I think the point you're trying to make is whether that is as worthwhile an effort as spending the time, effort, and resources on the management and tracking of the populations at the provincial level in the first place.