As I said in my comments, all of these habitats are interconnected. If we know that we have a problem in the ocean, then we have to take additional action in the other habitats. One common feature is that salmon go through estuaries, so restoring and preserving our estuaries could do a lot of good. We could mix that with the sampling for green crabs that we've talked about and removing them.
The big question then gets to water management and what we do in the terrestrial habitats. There's a huge diversity of actions that could be taken there. The problem with that is not that it's not worthwhile. It's that you have to take enough action in a place to really make a difference in the survival of the salmon. The idea that we have a huge diversity of activities is good for community engagement. It's great that way. It's good to support first nation communities throughout B.C. However, it may not net sufficient benefit to a particular salmon stock to really increase the numbers.
These are the difficult trade-offs we'll have to make, but there are lots of actions we can take through the community, just as Mr. Temple said. The Pacific Salmon Foundation works with 345 recognized community organizations in B.C. that are all capable of doing good local work.