 Okay, now thank you very much. So I was given about five minutes to talk about the way forward on biodiversity. So I said no, that's too much time, no five minutes. So just my, that's why I called it my personal reactions because indeed it was a very rich science week and there's a very rich body of work that's going on. So it's great to see all of that. So I don't claim to have digested it all. And actually if I would claim it, then it meant I had split myself into different parallel sessions. So it's nice those things will be online. So then we can learn from it. And also we have established some informal communities of practice, like we had quite an interesting session on species selection methods. So I think we keep communicating and think we'll do so in the future. And there's a lot of work and knowledge from everybody that we can build upon. So if you can have the next slide, please. So also what I told Fergus, if you want me to talk about biodiversity, I have to show numbers biodiversity is about statistics. So, so that's one of the slides that was in the session yesterday. And it was also about a study that we're conducting for FAO on the state of forest genetic resources. So this is some new data that was combined. So it looked at globally for every country in the world know how many useful trees are there and they're about documented 40,000 useful plants. There's about 60,000 trees. So if you combine those two data sets, then you come up with about 14,000 useful tree species. And then you can also cross-stabilize them across the world. And also cross-stabilize them against a different major use groupings like human food, animal food, environmental services, etc. Then you can rank the countries. And what we can see is that ranking the countries. Now we have Indonesia coming first, Malaysia second, Brazil third. And the countries highlighted are the countries where see for aircraft now has feet on the ground. And I think that's also echoes what Lee was saying. I think what's important is to be in the field in the country. And that and I would contrast it not was a good introduction to biodiversity on the first day, but a lot of maps that you see globally, not the mate from the north and may not always reflect what's on the ground. So we are on the ground so we can see nothing as well because it's quite easy. Now with a few clicks, you can make a nice looking map, but you need to ground treat it as well. So the next slide. So it's a bit the same story here. So now it's again countries ranked by the number of useful trees. But now I included all the see for aircraft countries where we are. I've also included Germany, Pakistan. They rank a bit at the bottom, but I'm not proposing that funding should be made appropriate to the number of species native to your country. But I would say collectively, if you look at all the useful trees, you can see the numbers at the bottom. Those percentages know ready a very high percentage of the world's biodiversity of trees is in the countries we work on. I think that's a good selling point. And it's also something that we know and that we can build upon next slide. So one one thing that that's also connected very much now with three by diversity is this new collaboration between a lot of different organizations called the global biodiversity standard. And it has is based on these 10 golden rules for reforestation and we're also Susan contributed to. And I would say a lot of the principles are known know a lot of it is common sense, but it's easier said than done. Now, if you look at those key principles, you know, it has to be participatory is about quality planting materials. It has to be protecting biodiversity has not to replace land, et cetera, et cetera, easier said than done. And also it also shows the what what Fergus was saying now everything is interlinked. So you can I think you cannot talk about biodiversity by itself. No, it's about restoration as well. It's about livelihoods. So also these issues are strongly interlinked which we know, but also we need to build upon. And what's very nice from the size we can see from across the world. We have many pieces of the puzzle in place. So the next slide, please. So you cannot also talk about biodiversity without also thinking about the genetic diversity. So the slide, the map on the left top shows the materials that we have in our gene bank diverse material in collected from many different countries with many live gene banks that can know also fit into these large scale restoration programs. And on the right, you cannot see it in detail, but that's now the plan of tuning the one of the breeding seed orchards in Ethiopia. It's actually a massive, massive, massive work. These are several acres of seed orchards. So think also think Lars mentioned it in the earlier session, a lot of hard work from the local team. They're actually they said, backbreaking work, you know, when they were planting, you know. So yeah, it's already massive tree planting, just making those orchards. So just imagine how many seedlings those will generate. Then the map at the bottom, it's also links with thinking about biodiversity. No, so this is a map of the global distribution of eco regions. And that's also something we can build upon not to think about what's already protected and not note. It's a paper on nature needing half ideally to be protected. But we can also link the data from the natural distribution of species into selecting no useful trees that are suited to their conditions. No, so then working on mixtures of species. And I don't think I made these slides very early in the morning. I don't think there was another slide. You can just just a thank you slide. Yes. No, so I would say I'll stop there. I would say thank you very much for the opportunity. And I think it will also be great to keep all the discussions going. So thank you.