Pearl Culturing
Natural pearls are pearls produced naturally without
any human intervention, while cultured pearls are pearls produced with or
without the insertion by man of a bead by grafting, followed by maintaining the
mollusk in culture until the pearl is harvested.
Most of the genuine
pearls available in jewelry stores are cultured¡ªwhich means they were grown on a
pearl farm. Pearl farms can be set up in rivers, lakes, or oceans, depending on
whether you want to grow freshwater or saltwater pearls. To grow properly,
oysters and mollusks need clear, tranquil waters at a temperature of about
20-30o C (or about 68-86o F).
Pearl farm oysters and mollusks can be
bred in captivity or collected from nature. When an oyster or mollusk is between
2 and 2.5 years old, it is ready to be implanted with a tiny bead that will grow
into a pearl. The implanting process involves special technology that ensures a
high survival rate.
After they have been implanted, it will take an
oyster or mollusk 2 to 3 years to produce a pearl. Winter is the best season for
pearl harvesting, because pearls tend to have a deeper luster at this time of
year. Before the pearls are sold, they go through a process of sorting,
cleaning, bleaching, and polishing to prepare them for the market.

Freshwater
pearl culturing
Mother of pearlsHyriopsis cumingii, Hyriopsis
schlegeli, Cristaria plicata
Growth
EnvironmentFreshwater
RegionLake, river,
pond
NucleusWith small or without nucleus The inserted nucleus is
a membranous tissue of mollusks

Saltwater
pearl culturing
Mother
of pearls
Pinctada fucata, Pinctada imbricate, Pinctada maculate,
Pinctada margaritifera, Pinctada maxima, Pinctada mazatlanica, Pinctada
radiate

Growth
Environment
Saltwater
Region
Wide distributed in
different region of ocean
Nucleus
With large nuclei of mother-of-pearls bead,
plastic bead