 Felly, mae'n gweithio o'r hwnnw, mae'n gweithio o bod yn gwneud eich gael. Mae'n dweud i'r bywydau i'r bywydau, ac mae'r bywydau i'r bywydau o'r cyndafol i'r Oestrioli. Mae'n gweithio i'r mullag yn y flath, dwi'n gweld i'r drws ffrinds ardal, a'r cyd-dweud i'r bobl yn neu oedd, a'r bywydau i'r bywydau i'r bywydau i'r ffrinds ardal, i'r rhaid o'r ffawnau ar hyn. We've started with species like the bedong that eats truffles and the eastern qual, which we've just reintroduced, which is a carnivore and eats insects and so forth. We'll be using radio tracking collars and we'll be following each individual and seeing how they go over the next year and beyond. Over the coming years, we will be putting parts back or bringing something back called the yellowfoot of Danticinus, and then there could be brush-tailed fascagales, goannas, pythons, e-mews. You can see that it's really important from a conservation point of view, but also ecologically bringing an important species that we've lost from our woodlands. People, when they go to Mulligans, will be able to see these woodlands in the way they would have been in the 1700s, and that will be a very exciting experience.