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  2. Pinctada margaritifera - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinctada_margaritifera

    Pinctada margaritifera, commonly known as the black-lip pearl oyster, is a species of pearl oyster, a saltwater mollusk, a marine bivalve mollusk in the family Pteriidae. This species is common in the Indo-Pacific within tropical coral reefs. The ability of P. margaritifera to produce pearls means that the species is a valuable resource to humans.

  3. Tahitian pearl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tahitian_pearl

    Tahitian pearls come in a range of colors from white to black. [2] They can contain various undertones and overtones of green, pink, blue, silver and yellow. The most valuable of these are of the darker variety, as the naturally dark tones of the Tahitian pearls is a unique quality among pearls.

  4. Pinctada maxima - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinctada_maxima

    Pearl meat is the adductor muscle of the Pinctada maxima pearl oyster. Wild caught Australian pearl meat is MSC certified, recognising this delicacy as a sustainable seafood which can be traced to an environmentally sustainable source. In recent years, Australian pearl meat has been adopted by some of the world's leading western chefs as an ...

  5. Pearl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl

    Natural (or wild) pearls, formed without human intervention, are very rare. Many hundreds of pearl oysters or mussels must be gathered and opened, and thus killed, to find even one wild pearl; for many centuries, this was the only way pearls were obtained, and why pearls fetched such extraordinary prices in the past.

  6. Pinctada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinctada

    Black South Sea pearls, or Tahitian pearls come from the black-lip oyster; gold and silver South Sea pearls from the gold-lip and silver-lip oysters; and Akoya cultured pearls from Pinctada fucata martensii, the Akoya pearl oyster. Pearls are also obtained in commercial quantities from some species of the closely related winged oyster genus ...

  7. Pinctada mazatlanica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinctada_mazatlanica

    By the 1840s, the export of the shells was as valuable as the pearls extracted from them; the nacreous shells were used to make mother-of-pearl buttons for clothing. In 1874, compressed air diving equipment made harvesting the oysters easier. By the early 1900s, some 200,000 to 500,000 oysters were being harvested annually. [10]

  8. Human interactions with molluscs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_interactions_with...

    Most molluscs with shells can produce pearls, but only the pearls of bivalves and some gastropods, whose shells are lined with nacre, are valuable. [4] [5] The best natural pearls are produced by marine pearl oysters, Pinctada margaritifera and Pinctada mertensi, which live in the tropical and subtropical waters of the Pacific Ocean.

  9. Oyster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster

    The largest pearl-bearing oyster is the marine Pinctada maxima, which is roughly the size of a dinner plate. Not all individual oysters produce pearls. In nature, pearl oysters produce pearls by covering a minute invasive object with nacre. Over the years, the irritating object is covered with enough layers of nacre to become a pearl.