Mr. Chairman, perhaps the proper way to try to answer this question is through discussions with the various wildlife management boards that we are setting up presently. Since we are committed to the principle of co-management, we should put the question in front of the people who are asked to co-manage and see what it is. In my view, if you try to sell animal parts out of an animal that you killed for the hide and for the commercial hunter, you will wake up one day with the realization that you could literally throw the skin away because it would be almost worthless in comparison to the price of the gall bladder or an individual part of the animal, that you are better off to just forget about the wild hunt and just go after the sale of a particular animal part that you could stuff in your back pocket. Those are the dangers. I know that we feel we are isolated and we could monitor, but, as we have said, we are asked to monitor one-third of the land mass of Canada and it is huge. We cannot say with certainty that we can control poachers and illegal hunts at all. When you are talking about the kind of money that can be made in the trade of animal parts and if the demand grows, there are some brilliant minds out there who will probably find some way to do it and to do it enough to make it worthwhile.
So it is, as I said, something that I would not encourage. Maybe the question should go to the wildlife boards, without cutting short the discussion here.