As I mentioned, in our case we have restored Manitoulin Island. You have to look at Manitoulin. It's a big slab of limestone about 160 kilometres in length, and it slopes southwards in a big, gradual slope. All sorts of cold-water streams emerge from it. We represent 30% of the Ontario side of the main Lake Huron basin.
Those fisheries.... We did studies in 2000 that showed that 70% of those streams were negatively impacted by 150 years of land use practices. Some of them didn't even function anymore. Today, after all the strategic planning, we have entire rivers monitored and assessed, and for every linear metre along that river, we can tell you whether it needs anything done and how much it would cost per linear metre.
In the nine kilometres of in-stream habitat we have managed to do to date—nine kilometres plus adjacent area up to 30 metres away from the stream, so that there's a riparian buffer—we helped to work with local agricultural producers, who retired those portions of land and provided fencing for them and did all the work. We're getting a quantifiable 193% increase in aquatic life. That includes fish. That in turn goes back to restore what is in the Great Lakes.
Also, we are tourism dependent, and this means that people start coming. They're starting to say, “Wow, this is incredible; it must be the work these people are doing.” These are outsiders who come from all over.