But when I, when a zoo is told, you have to worry about enriching and the animal welfare of your worms or your crickets, you know, that you’re feeding to other animals, I think that’s going a little bit overboard. You know, you get mealworms in once a week, you take care of them, you feed them for a week and you feed them out over the course of that week. Okay. Worrying about the welfare of that mealworm is silly. When you should be worrying about the welfare of your Galapagos tortoises, your giraffe, your tree kangaroos, your fruit bats. Okay. So I think animal welfare is a constant, absolutely a constant. Okay. And you should always be looking at animal, the zoo director should be looking at the animal welfare, the, the zookeeper, the curator, everybody should be looking at animal welfare to, to do what, what is the best that we can do for this animal. So, yes. But again, the definition is so broad and so, I I, I think the term is overused to be very honest with you, you know, in the zoo world, just do the best you can with the resources you got and be critical of what you’re doing. Be honestly critical of what you’re doing or not doing.