Yes, and it is an example of how we have changed our measures to respond to the industry. Now, if we see a North Atlantic right whale or have a confirmed acoustic detection of a North Atlantic right whale, we close an area of about 2,000 square kilometres around that whale for 15 days. During the second week of that closure, if we spot another whale in the same area, then the implicated zone becomes a seasonal closure and is closed until November 15. Otherwise, those areas reopen and the harvesters can return to those areas.
When we cite that closure and initiate it, we obviously can't have harvesters snap their fingers and have their gear out of the water, so they're given a minimum of 48 hours, but it's often longer if weather conditions require it, because obviously human safety is the paramount consideration.