Basically a subsistence fishery is our term for an aboriginal fishery. They are more or less interchangeable. But we distinguish between a domestic fishery, which is a licensed fishery, and a subsistence fishery, which is a fishery taking place under aboriginal treaty rights, so it's not a fishery that the Yukon government licenses. A domestic fishery, on the other hand, is typically done by non-aboriginal people for their own food fish needs. But it's a food fishery, which we distinguish from a recreational fishery.
I'm not a subject expert, but the way I understand the FSC—and maybe, Dan, you can clarify—is that, once the final agreements have been signed, they are constitutional level documents. They specify aboriginal rights to fish in Yukon. So all members of that first nation have their rights to fish enshrined in those final agreement documents. In most cases, those are different from FSC, which is cases where the final agreements would not apply. But basically those rights are enshrined in those final agreement documents that allow for food, social, and ceremonial purposes.