Thank you.
I'm going to direct this question to Mr. LeBaron.
You mentioned in your statement at the start how some of this data is used by the Canadian government through groups like COSEWIC, the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, which makes decisions as to whether species are threatened or endangered or other categories. Those decisions are, of course, based on data.
For full disclosure, I used to sit on that committee. We had far more data on birds than we had on anything else, whether it was fish or plants or mammals. We had that data because of these citizen science projects that spanned many decades and covered the country.
I'm just wondering if you could comment on that, on why it's so important to have these programs. Not only does it save the government money; this is also the only way we can do this. It's producing data that's very useful in conservation issues, as I think Mr. Lobb was alluding to.