If I understand your question, Mr. Harris, I believe many of those universities--half a dozen or so in British Columbia, I believe--for the most part have been engaged in the R and D program around the mountain pine beetle. For example, the University of Northern British Columbia has some very fine researchers in and around the mountain pine beetle. I know they've been working in collaboration with my own staff out of our facility in Victoria.
So the universities have been heavily engaged in both the biological side of the issue as well as the utilization side in terms of what happens after the trees have died.