South Sea Pearls Cultivated primarily in Australia, Myanmar, Indonesia, and the islands of the South Pacific. They are produced by the oyster species Pinctada maxima.
South Sea pearls tend to be both the largest and the rarest of pearls. Their rarity is due to the fact that growing larger pearls requires a great deal of time, during which many things can go wrong: the oysters can die, the pearl can become misshapen, etc. Thus, South Sea pearls tend to be among the most expensive of pearls, commanding high prices for quality specimens. Their most common colors are white, silver, and gold.
Freshwater Pearls A great irony of pearl history is that the least expensive cultured pearl product in the market today rivals the quality of the most expensive natural pearls ever found. The price-value anomaly is obvious to consumers as they hasten to buy Chinese freshwater bargains. Indeed, pearls from freshwater mussels lie at the center of the liveliest activity in pearling today. Natural freshwater pearls occur in mussels for the same reason that saltwater pearls occur in oysters. Foreign material, usually a sharp object or parasite, enters a mussel and cannot be expelled. To reduce irritation, the mollusk coats the intruder with the same secretion it uses for shell-building, nacre. To culture freshwater mussels, workers slightly open their shells, cut small slits into the mantle tissue inside both shells, and insert small pieces of live mantle tissue from another mussel into those slits. In freshwater mussels that insertion alone is sufficient to start nacre production. Most cultured freshwater pearls are composed entirely of nacre, just like their natural freshwater and natural saltwater counterparts.
The Chinese were the first to culture a product from freshwater mussels, though their centuries-old Buddhas are not true pearls but shell mabes. The first cultured freshwater pearls originated in Japan. Quite soon after their initial success with cultured saltwater pearls, Japanese pearl farmers experimented with freshwater mussels in Lake Biwa, a large lake near Kyoto. Initial commercial freshwater pearl crops appeared in the 1930s. The all-nacre Biwa pearls formed in colors unseen in saltwater pearls. Almost instantly appealing, their lustre and luminescent depth rivaled naturals because they, too, were pearls through
Tahitian Pearls
The Black Tahitian pearl is produced by the Black
Lipped oyster (Pinctada
Margaritafera) which is found in the waters of
French Polynesia. Natural Black Tahitian pearls are
extremely rare since only one out of about 10,000
oysters contains a pearl. The Black Lipped oyster
was nearly harvested to extinction in the early
1900's. These oysters were in high demand primarily
for the Mother of Pearl which is part of the oyster
shell. Fortunately, the Black Lipped oyster was
rescued and is now raised in sea farms in French
Polynesia. Black Tahitian pearls are cultured in
these oysters on pearl farms in the atolls of French
Polynesia. Most of these pearl farms are in the
Tuamoto and Gambier island groups. The shape, color,
and luster of these certified cultured Black
Tahitian pearls are natural.
These cultured certified Black
Tahitian pearls range in size from about 8 mm to
about 25 mm in diameter which is the size of the
largest black Tahitian pearl ever found. Black
Tahitian pearls 12 mm in diameter or larger are
considered to be rare. These pearls can be very
large because the Black Lipped oysters grow to be as
large as 12" across and to be 10 pounds in weight.
Most Black Tahitian pearls are not really black.
Colors can be light silver, gray, yellow bronze,
green with pink overtone, and peacock with nearly
all colors showing in play-of-color on the surface
of the pearl.
Species of this shell are widely
distributed throughout tropical Indo-Pacific waters
from the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of California and
from Japan to the southern islands of the Pacific.
More specifically, this oyster also is found in the
Cook Islands, Fiji, Tonga, Samoa, New Caledonia, the
Philippines, Panama and the Gulf of California.
An adult Pinctada oyster can
reach a diameter of 30 centimeters (11.8 inches),
with a weight exceeding 5 kilograms (11 pounds).
Rare specimens as large as 9 kilos (19.8 pounds)
have been harvested. This species of oyster
demonstrates the peculiarity of undergoing a change
of sex normally during the course of its life. Two
to three years of growth are required before the
oyster is ready for reproduction.
During its female stage, the
mature Pinctada lays eggs all year. Only the
extraordinary quantity of eggs produced -40 million
per specimen- assures the survival of the species in
its natural environment, where the spermatozoon must
rely on a chance encounter for conception. Developing larva then become
prey for all sea creatures that eat plankton,
including the living coral of the reefs. Surviving
young oysters, once they develop bivalve shells, are
called "spats". But they continue to be targets of
many predators, including giant rays, octopus,
crabs, starfish and trigger-fish.