No. You're obviously well up on the latest information on northern cod, because this is something we've just been hearing in the last month or so. Fishermen have been calling us.
It started in southern Labrador when the fishermen called and said: “The cod are really skinny this year. What's going on? Also, there's no capelin here this summer, whereas last year there were many capelin and the cod were fat.”
After that call was reported in the media, more calls started to come in to us, and I was asked to comment on it on CBC's Fisheries Broadcast.
We've had several reports of cod this year in the fishery around the coast being a bit thin. Some of them are not looking very healthy, and the fishermen are also commenting that there don't seem to be as many capelin around this year as there were last year.
We're not totally surprised to hear this, because the last capelin assessment said that there were a couple of year classes of capelin coming in that looked quite weak. Those would be into the sizes that cod eat, so we weren't overly surprised to hear this. But it is a little bit of a concern, because when cod don't have good feeding, that situation tends to affect their reproduction, and it can affect their survival as well.
We're certainly very aware of these comments, and we are sampling the fish this year. Our research vessel survey has just begun—the big survey in the autumn. The sentinel fishermen have been collecting and freezing samples of cod for us throughout the summer. We'll be looking at all of that information to see whether there are any indications that the condition of the cod this year is of concern or not. Maybe they are just a little bit thin, but if they are extremely thin, then it would be a hint of a concern that we'd have to look at very carefully, because it could affect recovery down the road.