Absolutely. I, I think the, I I don’t want to get into too much technical animal behavior speak, but I think zoos, and I’m speaking mostly from my experience working in a ZA, I’ve been on the accreditation commission, I’ve done lots of accreditation inspections, and so I’m familiar with a CA standards and, and the development and the writing of those standards. And I would say that what we relied on to maintain animal welfare was what the behavior is called inputs. We want to have them in the right social group. We want to have enough space, we want them to have good food, we want there to be adequate heat and light and water. And those are all things that we provide for the animals as inputs puts with the assumption that if we do all these things right, that will translate into animal welfare and what, what a ZA has done. And what I think the, the animal welfare scientists as a group within the zoo community have done is said, you know, there’s more than that. And the way I like to explain it to people is doing welfare assessments, which is now a requirement in a ZA doing well welfare assessments is the equivalent of, okay, we’re, we’re doing all these things. We had all these inputs, the, the food, the water, the light, the heat.