Abstract

In French Polynesia, the P. margaritifera pearl aquaculture industry is spread over a vast area, as large as Europe. All the oysters for this the highly economically important activity are supplied from just a few collection lagoons, but they are grown in numerous sites across three archipelagos (Gambier, Society and Tuamotu). Many oyster transfers thus indirectly bring about grafting combinations mixing different geographic origins and production sites. This study aims to examine the impact of such graft combinations on cultured pearl quality traits. For this, six homogeneous and standardised experimental graft combinations (N = 6197) were conducted at commercial scale in the two growing locations the most frequently used in French Polynesia: Arutua atoll (Tuamotu) and Mangareva island (Gambier), using oysters supplied from by the top three collection sites: Ahe, Takapoto and Mangareva lagoons. At harvest, four main pearl quality traits: nacre weight deposition speed, pearl colour components (darkness level and green overtone), grade and shape categories were recorded by a professional sorter from the Tahiti auction and compared. Results revealed effects of the combinations of oyster origin and grow-out location, with: 1) significant origin × site interaction for nacre weight deposition speed; 2) colour variation at intra- and inter-site scales, with Ahe origin producing the most dark pearls and Gambier highest rate of the attractive green coloured pearls; and 3) higher grade categories for the Gambier origin and rearing location. These oyster-site combination effects highlight the benefit for the Polynesian pearl industry of switching from a mono-site/ company production system to a new multi-site production strategy to maximize overall cultured pearl quality expression.

Highlights

  • Cultured pearl aquaculture in French Polynesia is unique

  • Results revealed effects of the combinations of oyster origin and grow-out location, with: 1) significant origin × site interaction for nacre weight deposition speed; 2) colour variation at intra- and inter-site scales, with Ahe origin producing the most dark pearls and Gambier highest rate of the attractive green coloured pearls; and 3) higher grade categories for the Gambier origin and rearing location. These oyster-site combination effects highlight the benefit for the Polynesian pearl industry of switching from a mono-site/ company production system to a new multi-site production strategy to maximize overall cultured pearl quality expression

  • The corresponding aquaculture is based on the exploitation of a single species, the black-lipped pearl oyster Pinctada margaritifera, in a territory covering a surface as large as Europe, compared with other "smaller" Pacific countries, such as Japan, where the three main Pinctada species are co-cultured (P. fucata, P. maxima and P. margaritifera)

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Summary

Introduction

Cultured pearl aquaculture in French Polynesia is unique. In 2017, 134,16 tons of cultured pearls were exported around the world from French Polynesia, mainly to China (62%) and Japan (32%) (Figure 1, source: Direction des Ressources Marines et Minières). P. margaritifera is abundant at the wild in French Polynesia (Yukihira et al, 2000; Cunha et al, 2010). It occurs in the oligotrophic waters of coral reefs and atolls and is distributed across the Indian and Pacific Oceans, from the east coast of Africa to the west coast of America, as well as in the eastern Mediterranean Sea and the Ryukyu Archipelago

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