For biosecurity, on what they could do and what has happened in some other research projects, too, is things like swabbing of materials that come in and out of the barn. They can put tracers and map where, say, a potential pathogen might have moved through a barn. That might be one way that a research barn or facility could be used to help do research on biosecurity.
Some of the research has been done not necessarily in Ontario but in Quebec. They were on farm and actually assessed poultry industry practices with the farms to understand what they thought they were doing and how it was actually working. They used video cameras and came back to the producers and talked to them about what worked and didn't work and where they failed, because it also helps with best practice adoption and awareness building to build those knowledge transfer tools based on the research. It's about taking the research and putting it into common everyday practice to support—