I, I think it does for that same reason. And euthanasia is not something that, I mean, there are different, what you’re talking about, I think particularly is management euthanasia as opposed to euthanizing animals that are having a severely declining quality of life. That’s, I I think it’s something that may have to occur in certain circumstances, but, but I think part of our job is really managing to, to minimize that and try to come up with alternate solutions as an example there. And I, I don’t know, you know, what all the things that were that, that have been tried with gorillas in terms of managing the fact that a normal, a normal population of gorillas, a a harem, maybe one silverback, a number of females in her offspring, half of which are females. And as the youngsters are born 50 50 male and female, there’s a surplus male problem. I, I think in European zoos, they’ve used castration or other things to try and deal with the surplus males we elected in the US within the gorilla SSP to put together groups, put, put together troops of all males. And that was a pretty radical idea when that was first pitched in the mid eighties. But I think coming up with solutions like that, that, that don’t make an animal a surplus just because it’s a male and it’s perhaps not destined to be a silverback of a troop.