It would be on a list for you. Of course we're focusing on terrestrial species here. The committee had done something on aquatic species in the past, and I guess with an amphibian we're kind of in between here. It spends a lot of time on land but certainly has an impact in water in a big way.
We're talking about the Garry oaks ecosystem on the west coast—in the Coastal Mountains, Olympic Mountains, and certainly in my area on Vancouver Island. Part of our Mount Arrowsmith biosphere was identified because of the presence of Garry oak ecosystems in some areas in my riding.
Scotch broom has also become a real problem. We have local programs again, cutting broom in bloom, trying to eradicate this. Along open pathways it is displacing other plants that deer like to graze on and so on. There is salal. Maybe that's not correct to say salal, but there are other plants, such as lupin along the roadsides and so on, all being displaced by mile after mile of Scotch broom if we don't take that down. It's amazing how it has spread. And again, you'd be aware of these as species, but management plans are not Environment Canada's concern. That's worked out with cooperation among Canada, the provinces, and municipal and local authorities.