Thank you, Mr. Chair.
I thank the witnesses for being with us because it is always informative.
I am happy that we have someone here with us who is a little more skeptical about pinniped management and about the way we are thinking at the table, so that we can make good recommendations for the government. It is important to hear what may sometimes be polarizing opinions so that we can question and challenges ourselves on how to move forward in a fair and wise way.
I will direct my questions to you, Mr. Stehfest. I am very familiar with the David Suzuki Foundation.
I don't think anyone at this table wants a cull, vicious or otherwise, of pinnipeds or any other animal population just for the sake of killing animals. Very few people who care about the ecosystem balance of our rivers and oceans want that. I am a strong supporter of respecting animals and especially nature.
With that in mind, I would like to hear your thoughts on the balance between prey and predator, a subject that I have often raised at this table. There is a natural balance between prey and predators on the planet. Historically, humans have been a part of that. Of course, as with everything, there have been abuses. We will not talk about the abuse of other animals that are raised in industrial operations and that are hung, still alive, from hooks for transport because it costs less. There are all sorts of terrible things happening out there in the world.
However, if we look at what indigenous people do as part of their rituals and what is done by the people of the Magdalen Islands, whose survival can be attributed to seal hunting, then did we not throw the important ecological balance between prey and predator out of whack when we banned seal hunting?