Yes. We launch teams into the Gulf of St. Lawrence now and have done so every summer since the whales relocated there. We are not doing research as much in the Bay of Fundy as we used to, and not at all south of Nova Scotia, simply because we're going to where we expect to find the whales. We contribute to the photo identification programs that are maintained through the catalogue of individual whales at the New England Aquarium. All organizations that work on right whales contribute to that catalogue so that we can track the population, track scarring, track health assessments, and track reproduction, births, deaths, and all of the different life history parameters for this species.
We also have an extensive genetics program right here in Canada at Saint Mary's University in Halifax, which is tackling the inbreeding problem. I will say very quickly that right whales have a small gene pool. There are only 360 whales, but they are essentially taking care of business themselves through what's called genetic purging, in that inbred calves do not survive, whereas the calves that do survive have fairly high genetic diversity, and it bodes well for the population. We won't have as many calves, but the calves that we do have will have, let's say, the good genes.