 We've just sequenced the genomes of 82 carcapool. That's more than halfway towards our goal to sequencing the genomes of all living carcapool. Now the genome is the set of all genes in an individual so with all of the genomes we will have a complete genetic map of an entire species and that's something that's never been done before for any species. It will help us to tackle some of the really big issues for carcapool the things that have pushed them to the brink of extinction the things like infertility was a big worry of ours at the moment, disease too. It will help us to understand why some individuals are less fertile than others why some individuals may be more susceptible to disease. It will tell us hopefully how old carcapool are there's something we don't know yet at the moment how to actually age a carcapool and DNA changes over time so if you look at the change of the DNA of an individual at several different locations on the genome of an animal you can actually work out how old it is. The reason why we're doing all of them and not just a few of them is because we manage carcapool individually. Every carcapool is managed different to every other carcapool so having that genetic information for everyone will help us to refine that information. It's really exciting and it's attracted a bit of attention and it could be a game changer for carcapool it will completely transform the conservation of the species we hope.