Sure. Again, from my own experience at the Myra Falls mine that I worked at, we used to keep track of the Roosevelt elk, which often would hang around the mine site because it was easy for them to see predators.
It goes back to one of the points I made in my remarks that when you look at a mine site, it has usually a fairly large holding of land that is often undisturbed around the active mine site, and so, in our view, there are real possibilities around making use of some of the tools that we discussed today, like conservation agreements and CEAA decision statements.
There is also, as you pointed out, our relationship with aboriginal communities. We have more agreements signed with aboriginal communities in Canada than any other industry and in any other country, and many of those agreements are increasingly building in environmental stewardship elements. Just the other day I was up at the Red Chris mine in northwest B.C., and they were in the process of hiring, from the Tahltan, someone who would be reporting to both the mine and the Tahltan leadership, and who would be responsible for doing environmental monitoring around the mine site. There are a number of really innovative and interesting things that our industry is doing.
There was another example around a closed mine that was brought up earlier. I referred to bats in my remarks. There is some really interesting work in the interior of B.C. where some old, abandoned mining adits have been turned into bat habitat to help some of the bat species that are recovering.