I would add that in Parks Canada, as you know, our ecological integrity monitoring program every ten years leads to a “state of park” report for each and every individual park and site, which then informs the actions that our strategies are taking in our management plans.
More recently, what we've been able to do is link that program to our conservation and restoration, the $84-million program that Kevin iterated earlier, in terms of restoration actions to help mitigate or to make improvements in those ecosystems in decline that you're speaking about.
To date, we have managed to complete 120 ecological indicators, which are at the ecosystem level, for our 44 national parks, including 600 measures, nine of which are indigenous knowledge measures. We have some room to grow there but are certainly working towards having good science to inform our decisions and our actions.