I would like to add that I think monitoring is key.
As you mentioned, there's an increase in seal and there's an increase in striped bass, but they're both non-invasive species. They were here before, and we have changed the balance of the ecosystem so many times, not just over the last 20 years, but over the last 300 years. We need to take a step back and look...they're not enemies. They are there. We have to monitor their diet—maybe they don't eat that much salmon, but maybe they do—and adopt a precautionary approach. I think that's necessary, as with all harvest policies, and there is a chance to increase the seal harvest, absolutely.
In the Mi'gmaq, they started to hunt seal again because they're everywhere. Striped bass is the same thing, and I know our nations have requested, for the past two years, a commercial licence for striped bass. We were told not yet, but I'm hoping that the federal government will be open to it with reasonable small quotas to start and see how it goes from there. There is an imbalance with the salmon and other species that are in low abundance in comparison to the seals.