 Well, we think we might have a new type of Leptospirah bacterium in New Zealand. And this bacterium is obviously of significance to the farming industry. And this one in particular seems to be of interest to the dairy farmers. Twice a day they're exposed to urine shared by the cattle. And that's a real risk to them because the Leptospirah spread in the urine and they'll get it through contact with the urine through cuts or in the mucosa, through their nose or mouth or whatever. We've had a large nationwide program where we've sampled 200 farms and 20 cattle on each of these dairy farms and we've found large proportions of the cattle actually have teeters to this particular type. That means that the body has seen, they've been infected or seen this bug in the past. We're seeing a piece of DNA that we can't identify as any other organism that we have circulating in New Zealand at the moment. It's either a new strain or a very different organism. We just don't know and that's why it's so important to isolate this organism and grow it so that we can have a look at the whole genome of the organism and determine what exactly it is. We hope to have a PhD student to go out and target farms where we're seeing a prevalence of this particular type of bacterium, try and isolate it in urine and culture it. If you've got some cultures then do the DNA work on it to understand what this organism is.