It's expected to be down into 2011, with possible rebuilding in 2012 in this particular population.
We're also seeing shifts, of course, in other populations. In the Newfoundland fishery there were lower TACs in some areas and higher in others. The Scotian Shelf went up a little bit.
We are noting the significant ecosystem shifts in the north Atlantic. The temperature and the oceanographic regime--they're changing. We no longer think we're managing a constant where fishing is the only knob you have to dial up or dial down in order to control outcomes. Clearly, in something like shrimp, with a 15% or less harvest rate, the change in abundance there is caused by recruitment. We're concerned about where that's going, because we're seeing the shifts being reflected in lower TACs in some areas.
It's too soon to tell whether the very different--very different--conditions that were present in the Gulf of St. Lawrence this year will have an impact on productivity, and, if so, on what species, and how it will be manifest. We are not dealing with a constant: ecosystems go through big cycles in terms of the populations that rely on them.
So it's anything but 100% predictable when it will happen, but we're making the conditions ripe for rebuilding in 2012.