Thank you.
There's lots of food for thought here from all of you. Thank you very much for that.
Thank you, Dr. Willison, for your comments about adaptation, that ecosystems adapt, that species adapt, but we need to create a framework to optimize that adaptation, if I can paraphrase what you've said. It's on the record, so we appreciate those thoughts.
I want to direct a question to Dr. Hutchings, because we have someone who's experienced with COSEWIC here, who was a chair from 2006-2010. I want to throw a little question out to you.
On the west coast, with our organization similar to Huntsman, we had the Bamfield Marine Science Centre, and we had a species at risk: abalone. We had a Bamfield Huu-Ay-Aht abalone aquaculture project. DFO helped to fund this. They creatively found a way to grow these creatures in an aquaculture setting as a first nations opportunity. They could stain the shells a different colour by feeding them different coloured seaweed, so you could differentiate them from the natural abalone. Regrettably, to sustain the program you have to be able to sell these creatures into a high-value market.
One of my frustrations as a local MP was we could not get COSEWIC to make a decision to allow for the sale of these endangered species, or to allow for aquaculture to contribute, because if you put these animals back into the wild environment, they'll eat the local kelp and develop a normal-coloured shell, so you couldn't differentiate the aquaculture ones from the others.
Do you have any explanation that maybe would help me understand how that could happen? Secondly, how can we have decision-making that allows for recovery of species through creative programs that would help to create a local economy, especially for first nations, and get past a rigid “endangered: we cannot use them commercially“?