Well, I can tell you a story that I think really captures it. I work with the Lake Babine Nation. Eighty-five percent of Skeena sockeye return to their territory to spawn.
Sockeye stocks in their territory are composed of a large, enhanced component and wild populations that they've relied on from time immemorial. They are at a point now where they're seriously considering shutting down their enhancement facilities because all the enhancement facilities are doing is driving fisheries in Alaska and in British Columbia, which in turn is depleting their wild populations.
This is having a serious impact. First nations in Canada are being forced into untenable decisions and considerations by these harvests in Alaska. Other first nations I deal with are also having the same issues in terms of the interceptions of their wild populations coming back and not even reaching Canada. When they do, their subsistence fisheries are being compromised.
First nations in Canada, whether they be on the coast and rely on commercial fisheries that are no longer really.... They're a shadow of what they were in the past. Whether they're food fisheries in the main stem or... People in the spawning territories are seeing such depletion that they don't even want enhancement because enhancement just begets more harvest, which begets more depletion of their wild populations. These are the kinds of very difficult decisions first nations are facing.