Yeah, that’s a, that’s a good question. There, there is a wild, it has to do mainly with, with just area, you know, acreage, to put it, to put it mildly, where, where there are areas that are largely untouched by humans and are big enough to still be mainly unmanaged, but still maintaining their animal populations. They are still out there. I’ll give you a great example. I worked for some time or was responsible for some time for a, a major biological study in the southern Sudan, in the Johny region. The World Bank had decided that Southern Sudan was going to be Arabia’s bread basket, huge wheat fields. Thank goodness it never happened because of the Sudanese civil war. I’m talking now about 40 years ago, and we were involved in a study supported by FA Food and Agriculture Organization in the United Nations in looking at the migration of antelope species across what was gonna be the line of a canal linking parts of the Nile River. And in that, and, and it’s still the same today, vast, vast area, something like two, 2,000,002, I think something like 2 million square.