Thank you, Rory, and good afternoon to everyone. As Rory highlighted, our commercialization efforts are well underway and are focused on launching our 3 developed productivity traits with customers. Pod Shatter Reduction, or as we call it, PSR in canola, and our herbicide tolerance traits in rice that we call HT1 and HT3. Before I launch into the product discussion, I would like to explain how we define developed traits, and why there are significant advantages to working with these traits in customers' elite genetics. Essentially, this helps to frame our vision for our developed trait products. We define developed traits as having completed multiple years of successful field-testing that the traits have met our Cibus product specifications and the traits have completed a product stewardship assessment, which includes quality assurance, regulatory, and intellectual property documentation. These developed traits are in customer elite genetics, providing Cibus customers with a significant time advantage to move traits to market and the potential to accelerate their pre commercial pre plant breeding activities. Essentially, we are an extension of their own plant breeding programs. This acceleration is also impactful to any of our follow on products that mature from our advanced trait development. This integration of genetics and traits highlights why we see this analog to digital moment, Rory mentioned previously. Let me continue by further describing our first developed productivity trait PSR in canola. PSR strengthens the pod shatter around canola or winter oilseed rape seeds, protecting the crop yield in many typical to extreme weather conditions at harvest. In canola, farmers are moving to what they call direct harvest, where they can harvest canola without the need to mow it down first. This saves on fuel costs and allows greater flexibility to manage the timing of harvest on their farms. Multiple years of our field trials, including the most recent 2023 results, have shown that our trait across many genetic backgrounds has similar efficacy to the leading competitive product that is currently on the market. We have already achieved significant commercial traction with our PSR trait, demonstrated by our engagements with 10 seed company customers to have Cibus' PSR trait edited into their elite germplasm. We believe this current customer base, which includes names such as Bayer, Nuseed and Nutrien, represents over 20 million acres or approximately $150 million of potential annual royalties from canola and winter oilseed rape. We achieved a major milestone in 2023 by completing transfers to multiple customers, signaling that PSR is getting closer to generating revenue for our company. We enter 2024 with significant momentum. And by the end of the year, we expect 7 to 8 out of our 10 current customers in canola will have their elite germplasm containing Cibus' trait either transferred or ready to be transferred back to them. As a reminder, the transfer of a lead germplasm containing the Cibus trait enables the start of the commercialization process. Moving on to our other 2 developed productivity traits, HT1 and HT3 in rice. This is another multinational expansion opportunity for Cibus. These HT traits targeting weed management in rice are fully developed and validated like our work in PSR. And our current customer base represents 3 million acres or approximately $70 million in potential annual royalties. To help frame this opportunity in rice, take for example the success of GMO based traits have had in major crops such as canola, soybean and corn. Over 95% of these crops currently utilize GMO based HT traits for weed management. This is amazing penetration that speaks to the value those traits provide to producers. However, the rice industry has yet to achieve similar success, having only had conventionally produced HT systems that struggle to have the success of GMO based HT traits. This void presents a significant opportunity for Cibus' trait solutions, which have been shown to be very effective as demonstrated in our 2023 field trial results that indicated both HT1 and HT3 met or exceeded performance expectations when evaluated with proposed commercial herbicide application rate. These field trials are an important step improving the effectiveness of our technology and helping to drive commercial progress. To that point, we have secured agreements with 3 major rice seed company customers, including Nutrien and Interoc. To have Cibus' HT1 and HT3 traits incorporated into their elite germplasm. Excitingly, we have also successfully completed the first transfers of customers' elite germplasm containing our HT1 and HT3 traits. This marks the beginning of commercialization for our rice traits. Our commercial team is working hard to expand our customer base for canola and rice with all 3 of our existing developed productivity traits and we expect to secure additional customer agreements in 2024. Let's move to progress of advanced traits. In addition to the incredible achievements within our developed traits, we continue to make progress with our 2 advanced traits. Sclerotinia Resistance, also known as white mold resistance, and our herbicide tolerance HT2 trait. Both are multi crop traits, meaning that they have potential efficacy across multiple crop types, including canola, winter oilseed rape, and soybean. This is an important distinction as we have the commercial opportunity to earn royalties across multiple crop types based on the same trait. Let's start with the first advanced trait, Sclerotinia Resistance. Sclerotinia is the most economically significant disease in canola and one of the major diseases impacting soybean. In canola alone, we estimate that approximately 30 million acres could be impacted by Sclerotinia. Sclerotinia is a fungal pathogen that causes a significant disease known as stem rot in crops. It affects 14% to 30% of canola and winter oilseed rape fields annually. And in 2016, the Canola Council of Canada reported that potentially up to 90% of the Canadian canola crop was affected. Sclerotinia can reduce canola yields by 7% to 15% with yield losses per infected plant being as great as 50%. The Canola Council of Canada calls Sclerotinia stem rot the most economically significant canola disease in Canada. It is also a significant disease in soybean, with the prevalence of the fungal pathogen detected in soybean production regions of between 33.3% in 2015 and 78.3% in 2020. To be durable, this resistance trait, like other disease traits, need to address multiple parts of the disease condition, meaning it needs multiple modes of action. In 2023, we achieved a milestone in stacking 2 different modes of action against Sclerotinia in canola, and we were able to successfully prove effectiveness in greenhouse tests. This year, we expect greenhouse results for a third mode of action for Sclerotinia Resistance in Canola. We are also currently developing a plan to integrate Sclerotinia Resistance into soybean once that editing platform is fully developed. When successful, this would be the first major disease trait that would be applicable to multiple crops. Across canola and soybean alone, we believe this represents over $800 million of future annual royalty payments. Let's move to our next advanced trait, HT2. Many weeds have become resistant to herbicides as a result of their extensive use over the last 20 years. Thus, for crops like canola and soybean, there is huge demand for broad spectrum herbicides and associated herbicide traits that target broad leaf weeds. This is where our HT2 trait can make a real difference in improving productivity in farming. We completed successful edits of HT2 in canola in 2023, demonstrating continued progress in its development. Because of demand in canola and soybean, we believe HT2 has the potential to be the first gene edited trait to achieve 100 million acres of yearly use. For perspective, the industry estimates that GMO based herbicide tolerant traits are utilized currently on over 300 million planted acres. So, there is a clear precedent demonstrating adoption of value enhancing traits, which represents an immense opportunity for us. We are excited to see the important greenhouse results for this trait this summer. Combined, our 3 developed and 2 advanced productivity traits represent a potential target market of over 250 million accessible acres, which translates to well over $1 billion in potential annual royalties. I would emphasize that we are just scratching the surface of what we have the potential to achieve with this business. Let's move on to other platforms and sustainable ingredients. Now, I'll touch on the development progress of our other crop platforms and our sustainable ingredients business, utilizing a set of quality traits that we are working on. We announced in January that we made a major industry breakthrough in completing what we believe to be the world's first successful regeneration of wheat plants from single cells of elite wheat germplasm. This amazing accomplishment demonstrates our company's continued success in developing scalable high throughput breeding platforms that can operate as extensions of seed Company breeding programs. We believe this new platform opens the potential for developing various productivity and sustainable traits that work to address the most significant challenges faced by wheat farmers globally. I'm extremely proud of our entire R&D and technical teams for making this breakthrough. Our success was completed well ahead of schedule and we expect to demonstrate initial edits toward developing productivity traits for wheat this year. Turning to our soybean single cell regeneration platform. This is clearly one of the toughest cell biology challenges many institutions have faced. However, we continue to make progress on this challenge by refining many steps in this process to be successful for our standardized high throughput trait machine. We expect the platform to be operational and have initial editing completed in 2024. Continued development of our soybean platform is a key strategic initiative and is the foundation of our emerging sustainable ingredients business, which is focused on the development of plant based alternative oils for downstream customer applications. We anticipate completing discovery efforts for alternative oils this year, an initial step toward developing solutions utilizing our quality traits that increase our customers' ability to meet their sustainability targets. What's particularly exciting for us is that we already have existing engagements with many of the world's largest seed companies across other crops and projects. As we continue to build trust and demonstrate value with these customers, we are also sowing the seeds for our future soybean platform as well, which we think really demonstrates the thoughtful approach that we've brought to our business model. The commercialization of our 3 developed traits and the progression of our 2 advanced traits remain the central focus of our corporate strategy. As such, we intend to track the progression of each trait as it is deployed into our customers' alleged germplasm. The progress of which will be central to our quarterly updates going forward, as each trait by crop combination starts generating royalty revenue. I'll now pass the call to Wade to briefly review our financials. Wade?