One of the things that's very key to the environment here is the shorebird migration. And the shorebirds migrate through the Delaware Bay every spring, and it's timed to meet the spawning of the horseshoe crabs. So it's not unusual on any particular day in the spring, in late May or first of June, to see a third, a quarter, or maybe even up to a half of the population of, say, red knots or sanderlings or other birds here feeding on the horseshoe crab eggs. But they're not the only ones that depend on horseshoe crab eggs. In fact, many times you can look here when you're on the beach and see fish of many different kinds feeding on the eggs as well: young flounder, puppy drum, even small dogfish sharks, silversides, trout, bluefish, almost anything will feed on the horseshoe crab eggs in the spring of the year.