Yes. I think it can be either recognition-based or it could be in the form of a payment.
In B.C. there is a program that is paying farmers for.... It's just getting up and running for species at risk. There are the ALUS programs across Canada, the alternative land use services programs, that pay farmers as well.
The key is that you don't want to create species at risk or any other habitat as a liability for the producer, because if they don't want it on their lands because they see it as being a risk to what they're going to be able to do on that land, that's a big problem for all of us. What we want to do is make sure they understand that their private property rights are respected. We can move forward in that sort of atmosphere.