So a lot of those early successes were collaborative things that had to do with the National Zoo and, you know, and Ulie Seale and, and, you know, not necessarily the, you know, the zoos in Minnesota, although we’ve always collaborated with, you know, everybody. So a lot of these, you know, first time things, the problem that we’ve got, we mean the whole zoo world, is that we’ve had some really, really good first time that, you know, the, you know, the first, first time this, first time that, whatever, you know, first wild cattle that were artificially inseminated and the first embryo transfers took place in Omaha. The difficulty is that you can’t really say you’ve accomplished a great deal until you can do it over and over and over again with predictable repeatability so that you can have a 40 or 50% success rates, or, you know, let alone, even in cattle, you know, you get it with embryo transfers, you can get a 80% success rate. And we’re not even close to that yet in the zoo world. So there’s still a lot of work to be done. You know, some of the big successes of courses are happening with amphibians and frogs right now, but that’s a lot, in some ways it’s easier.