In general, Parks Canada is involved where there are opportunities. It's very active in creating the linkages with provincial parks or other parks managed or protected by other authorities. For the Mountain Parks block, if you take it as a block, the world heritage designation is actually not just for the Parks Canada holdings; it includes Alberta and British Columbia holdings. All together, they form a much larger contiguous group of protected areas.
Those types of opportunities are exploited. There's a very clear relationship with a good number of model forests off Jasper, off Fundy, and off Terra Nova, to name some of them, so the model forest system has great value in terms of management of land for multiple purposes. It's not a protected area model, but it provides a good buffering.
I have to say that there is a clear international agenda in the protected area world for the promotion of the connectivity. It's all about habitat fragmentation. We know that 3% is not going to work, and that even if this 3% is made up of little bits here and there, they need to be connected. There is a very clear international agenda. Do the protected-area communities...? From the leaders, the practitioners, the promoters, and the science, is it all there for us to really have a good set of tools to create this connectivity? No. It's not from failure of interest, but because it's the infancy of this.
We still have not figured out all of the science of it and all of the policy of it. This will have major implications into land ownership and all sorts of other areas of regulated parts of our world. That will need to be explored before we really can have a good model.