Certainly. I can share that I've also received more than my fair share of death threats relating to endangered caribou recovery. I live in that world. Quite frankly, I don't think there's room for that in our society. There needs to be a broader discussion about what's okay and what's not.
As it relates to what's going on down south, when I refer to the Gold River—Mr. Hardie, you probably know where that is—that is not a system that has a whole bunch of “man-made” or anthropogenic change on it. In essence, what you're saying is that those seals are specializing. We experience this with mountain caribou and cougars at times, too.
We can take it a step farther. There's the in-river piece and log booms. I'm sure that's all contributing. With our steelhead, we've put transmitters on about 35 kelts before they go out to the ocean. Not one of those has come back and made it back to the river. Half of those are not making it from the inshore environment. Within a kilometre, essentially, of the coast, half of them are dying.
I'll defer to Dr. Carl Walters. I'll defer to Murray on that.
We had first nations attend our AGM on the weekend. From their perspective, they've always harvested seals, and they've always managed seals. I think there's the in-river and closed in environment, but I think there's also the environment in the Pacific. The big thing is—