Yes. Thank you for that question.
The total harvest take of the chinook salmon in the Yukon River has traditionally been 25% of the Canadian harvest share for the United States for the upper Yukon River. Historically it's been such a low number that it's been about 10 years since it has been adequate to meet the need for our subsistence, according to the computation on the State of Alaska website. They have all of that information readily available there, but I can send some more detailed written testimony around it. I could go on for 16 hours, but you have about 29 minutes.
The traditional knowledge around that is that we take only what we need from the Yukon River, especially our subsistence fishermen. Our traditional way of life has been greatly challenged by the lack of fish. Part of what we know about the fisheries and the challenges associated with them is that it's never been our harvest that's been the culprit, that's been the problem. It's always been outside influences, whether regulations, lack of salmon due to climate change or, in the 1900s, having a net put across the Yukon River so nobody could get fish. It's always been outside people who have impacted our harvest greatly, and that's been a note of contention.