[water bubbling] aquilino: so here's an abalone. it's got--you know, it just looks like a garden snail in these respiratory wawaters here. this is number 037. abalone are basically just like a big suction cup with an adorable face. we are now in the white abalone captive breeding lab. this i is a really exciting g pe wherwe try to o make the b babi, the baby white abalonene that wl bebe the animals that gogo out n the wild and help save the species. so these gu in thesee troughs were just booted out of the nursery over there behind you because that's where we're going to s send all ththe new animals that we prproduce thisis year, and these are e all the os that we produced in 2018, in all--this whole rack. and i can pull up a really tiny one and put it on my finger. swezey: and these guysys are all the same age, right? aquilino: they're all the same age, so it's s really amazing te size variation that we see in these animals. there's a lot of genetic variation in abalone, and d that's good news in some ways, when we think about clim