Well, I guess, to a certain extent, because the first dam or powerhouse is located about 20 miles, 30 kilometres, from the mouth of the river. What you have in the front of our community, which is located maybe about 20 kilometres downstream from that, is that the river freezes and opens up depending on the conditions. What you have is super-cooled water, which instantly freezes if it touches metal. The water is so fast now compared to the size of the river. As I said, it's double now what it was naturally. Especially in the wintertime too, it's more than 10 times in the wintertime, because the water used to flow less. The water more or less is a constant temperature. After it comes out from the turbines, it's not the temperature it used to be before the project. So the water just basically stays the same way.
In some cases, we've had other areas where it has affected the sturgeon...not maybe in our area, but I've seen reports where the sturgeon have spawned in the wrong part of the season because of the water temperature. Instead of spawning in the spring, they would spawn maybe in the fall or late....