Yeah, actually pretty good. And, and this is, this is one of the, one of the things the sort of anti anti zoo lobby keeps going on about is that, well, there’s been very few of these circumstances. I think the thing is that most, most of the really successful programs have been very much with smaller species. So everything from invertebrates, you know, rare crickets and butterflies in the case of some of the zoos in, in the UK for example, and they’re not the only ones dealing with that sort of animal to small rods. And even in, in one or two cases with, with big cats, particularly with cheetahs, cheetahs and then again with another kind of wild dogs have been quite successfully introduced. And there’ve been some, I’ve been involved in some of them very successful programs with some of the, some of the ungulate species who start particularly with desert species. Arabian orx of course, is the one that a lot of people know. But now with adx similar horned orx with, with gazelle a number of gazelle species and with, even with things like European bison for example, which, and I suppose you could even give the American bison as as a, as a an example way back of, of captive breeding, contributing things like the Blackfoot ferret is a great example of an animal on the bridge of extinction that was entirely re entirely zoo.