Lots of things can affect commercial fisheries, and as we've already seen across Canada, if you have major fluctuations in fish stocks—declines in fish stocks—coastal communities are devastated by that. Setting up marine protected areas that attract people for tourism, for viewing whales, for diving, or for whatever, can have enormous benefits. That's one economic benefit of it.
There are recreational fisheries in so-called “no-take” marine protected areas in many cases in the world. That applies in many areas of the United States that are no-take, and there's a huge economic benefit there.
The third is that communities.... There is something called a “spillover effect”, which we could debate scientifically for a long, long time. If you look at something like the haddock box, which is a big marine protected area on Georges.... You guys talked about the haddock box? You must have. The fisheries benefit of that closure—which is, in effect, a marine protected area—is enormous. That's where all the haddock is being caught.
Those are three examples of economic benefits to local communities.