Well, here when at North Carolina, one of the things when I first went there was the idea of having a major interpretive center, both the conservation center combined with a, a, an interpretive center showing the globe, you know, broader global issues at a time when there was still a lot of focus on individual species. And we did actually draw up plans for something called the Earth Resources Center, which was going to be sort of the introductory center to, to the zoo. But painted right at the start of people’s visits actually painted a much broader view of this, you know, what I call this jigsaw of life, which would’ve shown the, the exhibits would then have amplified that, but it would’ve shown the importance of individual species within ecosystems. But it, it would’ve been a very expensive exhibit. And at the time, what was interesting, and I think it was probably symptomatic of the era talking about 25, 30 years ago, was that the emphasis was all on new individual exhibits. And a lot of folks did not understand at the moment the importance of trying to link all of this together in a, in a sort of broader message as to how it is that species survive, can only survive within a, within a whole sort of panoply of other biological and physical factors. So that was, I think that’s the only exhibit I would’ve liked to have built had I had, we had the resources.