It's going to put a lot of pressure on it, because as grain prices remain strong and as demand remains strong, farmers are moving to maximize their farming operations.
The other piece I maybe should raise here is that a lot of farmers have retired and they've rented out their land, so you have fewer farmers, a lot of the younger farmers, and more and more acres subject to the bigger machinery.Those are the guys who want to come in and farm a minimum of a mile straight down and straight back, and that puts pressure on the landowner to clean up the land if he's going to maximize his rental income. That's what I meant when I said we may need to look at ways to move the habitat around to the margins of the land where it's not going to interfere with the commercial operations, or it'll be scrubbed off and it'll be gone.