That's where land use planning is really critical, I think. It's landscape-scale planning, whether it's formal land use planning or conservation planning, but at the landscape scale. I did talk about how most of our protected areas are isolated islands, and that's a problem. We need the protected areas, but we need them connected together.
Through a landscape-scale planning initiative, whether it be land use planning or other mechanisms, we can start to look at where the core areas are that need to be protected based on the mapping that's done on the areas of high conservation value, and how we can manage that landscape in between so that the species that need to move can move. It doesn't mean that there's necessarily.... It might mean that there's a protected corridor. It might mean that the landscape is managed in such a way that it's permeable to wildlife, so that wildlife can move up through the riparian corridors between protected pieces.
I actually really like the idea of cooperation among private landowners so that you can look at a landscape scale, take everybody's little piece, and make sure it's working together in the best possible way. That's really what we're talking about here: making sure the pieces work together.