 Well, I'm an urban ecologist and I'm really interested in the impact of domestic cats on our local environment. So I run a project called Cat Tracker and with this project, it's a citizen science project which means that we recruit the public to work as researchers with us. So it's a collaboration with the community to learn together about what our cats are getting up to when we're not looking. The Cat Tracker project involves attaching GPS units to cats and having them wander around for a week. You can download the data and figure out where these cats have gone and when they've gone there. There's a lot of surprises that have come out of this. So we've had cat owners find out that their cats have secret families, which was a pretty interesting result. Well, I'm interested in basically figuring out where cats are going and when they have this whole choice of habitats that they can utilize when they basically have free range, what areas are they choosing and can we figure out why they're choosing those particular areas? And specifically, are they areas of conservation concern? Are they areas where we do have a lot of rare native wildlife that might be trying to thrive in that area and cats might be making it difficult? The end result of this project is basically that we get cat owners on board with us to learn a bit more about our cats, they'll become a bit more interested and engaged in the issue and from there be able to make some more informed decisions about how they manage their own pets.