GemGeek
Pearlista
Datu Doc -- I like that. You earned that title. 

Tom: Great reports, sounds like a wild time in the Sultanate this summer.
Additional scene-setting can be found in Edwin Streeter's Pearls and the Pearling Life. There, it is clear that Louis Kornitzer had a swashbuckling predecessor in T.H. Haynes. Now we have Datu Tom (Doc).
Taking advantage to plug Yolanda's new book, when will we be seeing this?
On-the-ground counterpoint to the onslaught of doomsday pronouncements from the global warming and environmental sectors?valid as those may be.The Philippines are saturated by NGO people coming with dramatic stories on protection of animals: NONE OF THE MARINE MOLLUSKS is endangered in the Philippines, we even do not KNOW half of them.
I'm quite sick of scientists that know close to nothing and coming from the west here declaring that the Philippines are POLLUTED !!! There is not even one hundred km polluted out of 36000 km of coast. I wonder which country can tell that in the west.
I'm now busy lobbying already for weeks because of a few poachers of corals: they want to prohibit ALL sealife. Corals "grow" by 460 containers A DAY in the Philippines, but because of all the NGOs they want to punish all science.
Thanks to ecologists, we will NEVER KNOW 70% of the land fauna already. They now start with the marine things of which we know only 50%.
Personal communications with renowned divers and malacologists operating in the Philippines recently touched on these issues. Extract:
On-the-ground counterpoint to the onslaught of doomsday pronouncements from the global warming and environmental sectors?valid as those may be.
First, is it true that with long wave light, Pteria sterna and P. penguin can be differentiated? Is it also true that P.sterna is not believed to be native to the Western Pacific? If I'm wrong on one or both counts, there really is no issue.
I ask because we now have about 10-15 natural saltwater P.sterna pearls with GIA cert that came from the Celebes Sea. We also have several classed as P. penguin, so I assume GIA is using some kind of test to separate the two.
Do you think Pteria sterna came to the Sulu and Celebes seas on the keels of Manila Galleons that crossed for 250 years? One known example of transplantationof oyster types took place when the Suez Canal opened and Red Sea oysters made it into the Eastern Mediterranean.
Many thanks,
Tom
So the question that remains is by which method GIA species-certified the Pteria-genus pearls from the Celebes Sea.Both species belong to the same GENUS and share the same basic proteins (porphyrins) so....in essence all oysters from Genus Pteria SHOULD BE ABLE TO GLOW PINK-RED UNDER LONG-WAVE UV.
I know this to be true for at least 3 species (have no access to other species): P.penguin, P.colymbus & P.sterna.
I have analyzed the shells of these 3 species and all of them can display the Pink-Red fluorescence, due of course to the presence of these proteins.
Well Steve, somebody is messing up! If it is a natural pearl you have to inspect other features such as the pearl's unique spirals...the source shell should be invaluable...if those pearls are from the Celebes they are not P.sterna.
If you have a bead-nucleated pearl that glows pink...it is from Pteria sterna and comes from my farm. You've got a natural...it glows pink... Pteria of course!!! But in order to pinpoint the exact locality or species...you need more research, more information, more things to compare.
Unfortunately we have never had the resources to conduct more research...all our research usually costs a couple of cups of organic-grown coffee...but it works!!!