So this is a lot easier when I have like something like a picture. For all the wonderful listeners. Yeah, you're gonna see, picture this, if you will. So So I mean jel, or Well, I'll say moon jellies is easy to think about. So what we think of moon jelly is, you know, are the what's called the Medusa stage. And those are those big blobs floating out in the ocean collecting plankton. And those guys will reproduce kind of like corals where they shoot their gametes into the water, eggs will be fertilized by the sperm, those will turn into larvae, which are microscopic, these larvae will actually swim around and try to find a place to settle. So which which they'll do on any hard surface they can find, generally, it's the opener, you know, the ocean floor, seagrass rocks, whatever. And then that'll turn that little larvae will turn into what's called a polyp. And that looks like a little miniature anemone. And so at this polyp stage, what they'll actually do is they'll start cloning themselves. And so you'll start with one polyp, and eventually it'll get to, you know, 50 polyps that are genetically identical. And then at that point, if there is a seasonal cue, and that's what the jellies kind of, kind of, that's what tells them it's time to breed. Or it's usually a temperature swing because of the seasons. And then that little polyp will actually kind of, so I was saying it looks like an anemone, it'll kind of drop its little feeding tentacles, and then start to metamorphosis and then chain up. And that single polyp will actually turn into about 25, little baby jellies, that'll pop off and then into the water column they go to grow. So yeah, so at that point, they'll grow pretty rapidly in the open ocean, because there's nonstop food Nonstop flow, and kind of grow up into become the Medusa stage. And then the process will repeat itself.