I don't foresee that being a recommended option because the biology of the caribou means that it moves around on the landscape; it doesn't always live in the same part of the forest. It is a species that has adapted to forest fires, so leaving aside the impact of humans on the landscape, fire regimes are part of the biology of the caribou.
They move on the landscape, so what I imagine we'll have is an identification of critical habitat that says this outer perimeter, if you will, must be managed so that at any one time you don't have more disturbance than so much of this certain type. That's how I think it will come forward, but I'm waiting for the science to inform us particularly of that--as well as aboriginal knowledge, community knowledge, and consultations with groups like FPAC and others.