I would venture to say no. If you look at the mouth, there are plenty of salmon and other species coming in, so there are huge opportunities.
The fish are managed in zones. They're managed through five different zones in the state of Alaska. They're regulated up the tributary, and they come in, in abundance, at the mouth of the river.
There's a target to reach border escapement. They will fish and fish until they hit a specific zone and pass the sonar that detects that the numbers are dropping, and then they'll cut off the fishing. Oftentimes, it's in the headwaters, the zone that starts to head up to Canada, Eagle River being the last sonar on the Yukon River.
To your question, we're seeing plenty early on, but of late I think we've detected that the salmon are just not returning as they have historically.