Absolutely, yeah. Absolutely. Though the work that Ed and his group have done in Madagascar have directly helped and influence the gazetting of, I think, 17 or 18 new protected areas for lemurs, because every time they did identify a new species and, you know, the, you know, there are 27, 27 new species of lemur that have been identified and named, you know, by Ed Lewis and, you know, and, and the Omaha team. Now that’s the good side. The bad side is that gazetting a protected area doesn’t really help hugely, unless you also provide money to put boots on the ground. But one of the things that we found out is that, you know, because in Madagascar, for instance, eating lemurs was always taboo because they were considered to be ancestors. And then all of the other cultures begin to encroach on Madagascar. Madagascar’s incredibly poor country, incredibly protein starved by and large.