Okay. I'll start with the first part, which is whether or not it's a localized phenomenon.
To be clear, this work has been done in the Broughton and very much pertains to when one salmonid species feeds on another. So I would say that anywhere coho or another salmonid species is feeding on another--pink or chum or anything else that's infected by lice--this is very likely to occur. For example, in the Strait of Georgia, where we have only odd-year lineages of pinks, we may not expect this phenomenon to occur during those years when pinks don't make up a large prey base for those coho. But it's certainly not something that I would say is just localized to a small part of the Broughton Archipelago.
When it comes to the second question, which was whether or not this information has been shared with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans and the public in general, it was just recently published. There were two manuscripts published. One was in collaboration with two DFO employees. That looked at the accumulation of lice on coho in the Broughton, and then the population level consequences were also done with some other academics as well as a DFO employee on the east coast. All that's been published and just released online earlier last month. We didn't go out of our way to create a media situation about it. We felt that the best way to proceed was to allow this work to work its way through the system and to help it inform decisions down the road.