We have is river-by-river measures, so we have conservation limits that we're looking at achieving on each river. We have seen significant differences in at-sea survival. If you look at the inner Bay of Fundy, those are very stressed stocks. They're endangered. We have not been able to find the exact answers as to why those fish make a one-way journey out of the rivers into the ocean and don't come back. Others are more productive. It varies by river. So what we're doing is considering each river individually and setting up the appropriate angling and fishing controls for that river in an attempt to meet the conservation levels. When I was involved with NASCO, we set up a collaborative agreement called SALSEA, Salmon at Sea. It's research to try to get a handle on what is going on in the high seas environment that's having an impact on Atlantic salmon.
On March 31st, 2014. See this statement in context.