The introduction of a predator or of other factors is not recommended. However, as I was saying earlier in my address in connection with the prey-predator relationship, it often begins with a decline in prey, followed by a decline in predators. That being the case, we are expecting the decline phase for predators, meaning seals, to begin soon.
However, we are also entering a new climate change phase. That's where studies and models become really important for accurate forecasts of seal populations. We are expecting a lot of changes. I am in Gaspé at the moment, and we have been observing changes in water masses, temperatures and even stocks on an every day basis. We are concerned about lobster and fish stocks. When we pull lobsters out of the water, they are sluggish, and not as energetic as usual, because the temperature changes have led to a different sort of response.
So there will probably be changes in years to come, and they will have an impact on all populations; not just seals, but also fish and shellfish, among others. One thing is certain, and that is that we can expect the dynamics of animal populations in the Gulf of St. Lawrence to change. Unless there is a predictive model for this, we risk being surprised by the resulting scenarios, for seals and all fish species.