I th the, the zoo’s conservation program, I mean, it’s been through a number of iterations as as directors have changed and as management has changed, there was a, we had a director of operations that said, you know, his definition was conservation was what went on outside the fence. We didn’t do conservation in here. We ran a zoo. Conservation was what went on out in the field, which is not something that we subscribe to today or that I subscribe to. So we weren’t terribly involved in conservation programs before. There were veterinarians that were here that, that had that, that contributed directly to conservation programs that they were involved in themselves, that weren’t necessarily the zoos program, but we could provide them the, the freedom to pursue that. And, and so we, we went from that stage to the stage where we provided veterinary services to things like Dr. Randy Wells Dolphin research program down in Sarasota, which is run under the auspices of Brookfield Zoo. And, and it is Randy’s study that’s been going on for more than half a century, which is incredible. And we started out offering veterinarians to assist with sample collection analysis and that sort of thing, to the point where the veterinarians, particularly Dr.