Thank you.
We've invested a significant amount of funding through the habitat stewardship program and the aboriginal fund for species at risk. We have 2,400 projects on the ground through the first program, and another nearly 800 projects through the aboriginal fund for species at risk.
Examples of the projects include addressing invasive alien species. There's a unique habitat type in Ontario called an alvar community. Through the funding, people are addressing and removing the species at risk in those areas. So, too, a first nation in Ontario is removing the invasive Scotch pine to address the needs of a species at risk plant.
Significantly, I think there have been a couple of landscape-level management plans that have been produced through the funding. One relates to the threatened woodland caribou. It's a landscape-level plan to manage that threatened species in Manitoba. A second example is the endangered Peary caribou in northern communities. So there's a landscape-level plan to provide the habitat and other needs of those species.
I could talk at length about the number of projects that are happening, but there are literally thousands of projects that are making a meaningful difference for those species at risk.