Thank you.
This one is going to get down to more specifics on the sockeye fishery or actually on the Adams River run, which I have fished in the Thompson River. That river is clear water. We can actually stand on the shore and watch the fish migrating upstream. They are two feet off the beach in clear water. We can see them coming through in groups, in schools, and sockeye are schooling fish. Sometimes you'll see a group of four or five fish. Sometimes it will be 40 or 50. Sometimes it will be 400 or 500 fish all in one group moving through, and then you can sit there for two hours and there are no fish.
Have you done anything to sample those fish to find out if they are possibly all from the same progeny of parents or the same area, the same time zone? It seems to me it would be fairly easy. Maybe I'm too much of a layman, but you could actually stand there on the beach, wait for a school to come through, throw in a drift net, sample the number of fish and find out whether or not they're all from the same genome or not to find out if those fish stay together the full time out in the marine environment, through the river and lake environment. It's an incredible opportunity to study.