Thank you. I can speak a bit more to those programs.
The sentinels program is an academic program that is certainly supported through several different academic networks. The idea is to go out on the land, make many different types of observations and bring them into a central place.
Environment and Climate Change Canada has been more involved with the Arctic Eider Society, as well as SIKU. The Arctic Eider Society is focused around southern Hudson Bay and was the parent of SIKU.
I can spend a little more time on SIKU. This is an indigenous and Inuit Facebook that is specifically codesigned with partners. Academia and Environment and Climate Change Canada have been involved, along with community members in Sanikiluaq and other areas. The idea was to design and put online an application, so Inuit can be out on the land and report their observations as they travel. We have partnered and developed functionality within the app so hunters can report dead or sick birds. There is work with our scientists working on polar bears and their health, and when hunters and harvesters are hunting or working with animals they've harvested, they can report any abnormalities in the physical condition of the animals. That information is owned and controlled by SIKU and the indigenous co-collaborators on—