I look it as climate variability. We always see climate variability. We've seen the Atlantic go colder, warmer, and now maybe...whatever. It's not a consensus on climate change; it's an approach to assessing the current conditions under which the fish species are living, continuously measuring that, and looking at a number of factors in terms of the regeneration of the stock and things of that nature.
There's a consensus, if you will, on the approach, but I don't term it as climate change. It's looking at the species itself in terms of its variability and its productivity rate. There's no question that climate variability causes a change, sometimes positive and sometimes negative. Sometimes climate change can have a negative impact on groundfish, and the negative impact on groundfish actually regenerates the shrimp fishery because of the predator-prey relationship.