There are some examples to follow in some jurisdictions. There are some in Australia. We have international examples of some RFMOs--regional fish management organizations--having moved in this direction.
Generally I think we can learn from each other, but nobody has it all right at this point. It's a path that most of the developed countries have started down. Most of the science organizations have recognized that by looking at only one species you have a false sense of risk, because you don't see the broader picture. That's what happened to cod in the Atlantic. We had such a narrow focus on a small number of indicators that we missed the bigger picture of changing productivity. We kept fishing at the previous level even though productivity had dropped dramatically, and we were using the wrong indicators because we had such a narrow focus.
So having learned from that, we now have to look at a broader set of indicators, and we do have examples to follow from other jurisdictions. But generally we're all working this through at the same pace.