Thank you.
I'll follow up on that, because I was going to ask a question about how beneficial citizen science is, not just for the scientists and the science data and information we gather but for the citizen scientists themselves in terms of the benefits they get with the feeling of inclusion and their ownership of the data.
Mr. Mazier was talking about farmers and rural people with that deep knowledge. Citizen science projects could give them that sense that they're doing something, that they are part of this. They could understand it, and they would see the results. I just wanted to talk about that.
I would add, following up on Mr. Blanchette-Joncas, that most of these citizen scientists are not reading the scientific papers that come out of this. They're reading the reports that come out in the brochures and newsletters. I come from the Birds Canada world, where all of that is in both languages. That's where they get that sort of feedback, as well as on the sites themselves.
Could you maybe spend a very short period of time—because I've talked a lot—on how important it is to engage those citizen scientists and report back on their results so they can feel that they truly are a part of that whole scheme?
That’s for Jeremy or Andrew.