And how they– Well, you know, well part of that, part of that has to do again, we’re going back to a lot of the work that Ulie came down and did, we used to put together these work groups where we’d bring in Dave Wilt and Joelle Howard and Mitch Bush and Ulie Seal and a whole team from national and Minnesota and whatever, and work. And of course, Dave Wilt, you know, his focus, that was before we could afford a research staff of our own. So we did a lot of work on artificial insemination and, and embryo transfer and, and in vitro fertilization. And, and then, you know, as we progressed and we got our research and conservation research center up and building and running and began to build our own staff, we were, you know, the first, the first artificial inseminated tiger was born in Omaha. The first embryo transfer tiger was born in Omaha. We were part of the half of the team to, to do the first in vitro fertilized gorilla, Teemu, who was actually born in Cincinnati. It was a collaborative effort between Omaha and Cincinnati. I guess, one of the things that we probably haven’t touched on, and we were talking about conservation earlier, but, and that we’ve always been big believers, absolute believers in collaborative or cooperative efforts, whether it’s between two different zoos or, or a group of two or three or four or five different zoos that are collaborating and cooperating on a, a single project because no one zoo is big enough to do everything.