It was a concern of mine, but I think it's a bit dated now because the trawl fisheries that you're talking about and their effect on salmon were in the extreme North Pacific and in the Bering Sea. The Bering Sea pollock used to be the largest fishery in the world. It was highly productive, but it had an enormous bycatch of chinook salmon, into the hundreds of thousands of fish. The U.S. put very severe restrictions on their fishers there so that they now have a quota of bycatch. I think it's still around 80,000—maybe Mr. Hauknes knows—so once you hit that quota the fishery is closed.
There's a huge incentive to not hit that quota. Every vessel has to carry a monitor, and there are films and they report, and they do close the fishery when the quota's matched. So I don't have a huge concern—