Well, I think it’s, part of, it has contributed to, I don’t wanna say animal rights people, because we’re, we believe in animal rights. But other groups out there when we talk about the individual specimen and beginning to understand what welfare is, you know, when I first got in the business, welfare was give it a ball and let it play boomer balls, things like that. Where as, as I began to really understand welfare and dealing with the expectations of the public about you need a naturalistic exhibit, it needs to be bigger. We began to look at the science and say, that’s not necessarily, so we need to understand what behavioral diversity is and allowing behavioral diversity are allowing animals to have those choices and develop behavioral diversities that you would hopefully from research understand happens in the wild. And so that advancement there and understanding it’s not about the size of an exhibit or anything, it’s about the quality of the care and providing opportunities and choices, which 20 years ago we didn’t think about now, now we need to think about it and understand that it’s, it’s part of what we need to do. And it’s part of our obligation is to allow that specimen or that species to show as much behavioral diversity as possible, which all the researchers say that improves animal welfare. That’s probably been the biggest advancement to me in the last 10 years, is understanding what that means and going beyond large mammals and looking at welfare for reptiles or looking at welfare for aquariums, you know, in the, in the past year, well, I got my fish in aquarium and you never thought about it. There’s things going on there that if you really begin to understand what behavioral diversity is and what it should be, you change how you manage animals.