I'm not really certain that I would say anything is shrinking. As I said in my remarks, the fisheries are an emerging fisheries. Fifteen, twenty years ago, there really weren't a lot of fisheries in the eastern Arctic.
So there's a lot of pressure being exerted to expand fisheries for Greenland halibut and for shrimp. Those would be the main species. I think you could see more char being prosecuted, but again, it's access. There are a lot of areas where it is, but you've got to be able to get it to a plant while it's still viable or marketable.
In the western Arctic, if I had to point to an area where I have concerns, it's related to the commercial fisheries on Great Slave Lake. Maybe the focus there needs to be moving more to the recreational fisheries, which I think if you looked at the dollar amount and the economic return, it would have a much higher potential value. And we've got that demographic challenge that I mentioned. So if there was an area.... It's not so much lack of fish; it's lack of resources to prosecute that fishery.