Thank you for the question; I appreciate it. I'll address your first part, obviously.
Sure, you would think that increasing the number of recreational anglers would, quid pro quo, put pressure on the resources. Obviously fish and wildlife management are managed on the basis of science, on the basis of populations and of a whole bunch of complicated factors that biologists at the Ministry of Natural Resources undertake to manage in every one of those resources.
What our problem is in Ontario—and I'll speak specifically to Ontario—is that we see a tendency, in terms of both fishing and hunting, for the government's answer concerning regulating the sustainable use of any particular species to be always to look at the recreational sector. When a species becomes a little bit dodgy, the first thing they do is cut tags, quotas, licences for recreational fishing or recreational hunting.
This is going on in Ontario on both fronts right now. On Lake Nipissing, which is one of the biggest tourism walleye fisheries in Canada, the recreational tags have been cut back so that people now are down to two fish, and the slot sizes are so ridiculous—