Recent comments from Pixar President Jim Morris shed a little more light on the Finding Nemo sequel Finding Dory.

Speaking at Brazil’s Comic Con Experience over the weekend, Morris revealed that Finding Dory will be set in a California marine biology institute where marine life can be rehabilitated. These types of institutes are also typically where researchers can hold sea animals to study their ways of life.

According to Morris, Dory will be motivated to find her family after taking a class trip with Nemo to watch the migration of manta rays. She’ll somehow end up learning that her family is in the Marine Biology Institute of California – a place she was released from when she was younger.

Having a marine institute be the primary setting for Finding Dory should open up a lot of possibilities for the new film. Rather than being limited to a certain set of sea creatures found in a particular ocean, an institute will be able to include virtually any sea animal Pixar wishes to use.

Earlier this year we had heard that the film’s setting was a park similar to that of Sea World, but in light of recent revelations about the theme park thanks to the documentary Blackfish, the setting was changed.

Finding Dory will have a big emphasis on the meaning of family, according to director Andrew Stanton. “One thing we couldn’t stop thinking about was why she was all alone in the ocean on the day she met Marlin,” he said in a press release last year. “In ‘Finding Dory,’ she will be reunited with her loved ones, learning a few things about the meaning of family along the way.”

Finding Dory hits theaters June 17, 2016. Before then we have two original (not-sequel) films to look forward to: Inside Out in June 2015 and The Good Dinosaur in November 2015.