How do oysters make pearls? - Rob Ulrich

1,405,870 views ・ 2022-11-15

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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While most people wouldn’t consider the crusty exterior of an oyster
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to be particularly beautiful,
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opening up this craggy case might reveal an exquisite jewel nestled within.
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Yet, despite their iridescent colors and smooth shapes,
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pearls are actually made of the exact same material
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as the shell that surrounds them.
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Pearls, urchin spines, the shells of mussels, snails and clams, even coral—
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all these structures are made out of the same chemical compound:
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calcium carbonate.
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So, how does this single ingredient form such a vast array of materials?
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Calcium carbonate, or CaCO3, is common on land,
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and even more bountiful in the sea.
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The Earth’s crust is rich in calcium,
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and over millennia these deposits have seeped into rivers and oceans.
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This is especially true near hydrothermal vents,
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where hot seawater mingles with calcium rich basalts.
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Meanwhile, when carbon dioxide in the air interacts with seawater
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it eventually produces dissolved carbonate.
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Every year, the ocean absorbs roughly one third of our carbon dioxide emissions,
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adding huge quantities of carbonate into the water.
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It’s no surprise that sea creatures have made use of these abundant compounds,
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but the way calcium and carbonate are woven together into various shapes
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is surprisingly artful.
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Let’s return to the humble oyster.
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Like many aquatic mollusks, oysters start life as exposed larvae,
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and quickly get to work building a protective shell.
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First, an organ called the mantle secretes an organic matrix
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of proteins and other molecules to construct a scaffold.
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Then, the oyster filters the seawater,
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drawing out calcium and carbonate to combine them into its building material.
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It lays this material over the scaffold,
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which is covered in charged proteins that attract and guide
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the calcium carbonate molecules into layers.
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The specific arrangement of these protein scaffolds depends on the mollusk species
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and their environment,
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accounting for their vast diversity of shell shapes, sizes, and colors.
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Mollusks carefully control all components of their calcium carbonate creations—
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even manipulating CaCO3 at the molecular level.
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Using special proteins,
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mollusks can produce two crystal structures out of CaCO3:
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calcite and aragonite.
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Both of these compounds have the same chemical composition,
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but different qualities due to the way their crystal lattices are arranged.
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Calcite is the more stable of the two and less prone to dissolving over time,
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so most mollusk shells have a sturdy outer layer of calcite.
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As the slightly more soluble molecule,
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aragonite can better adapt to more or less acidic environments.
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So most mollusk shells have an interior layer of aragonite
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to maintain their internal pH level.
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But one form of aragonite is stronger and more versatile than the rest:
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nacre.
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Mollusks make this special material by placing successive layers of aragonite
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interspersed with proteins.
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These layers are stacked like hexagonal bricks,
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each surrounded by other organic material that directs their orientation.
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The uniform layering and brick-like structure of nacre
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is key to its signature iridescence.
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The layers are similar in thickness to the wavelength of visible light,
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so the light reflecting from its interior surface
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interferes with the light reflecting from the outer surface.
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When particles of light strike the nacre,
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they bounce around its multilayered crystalline structure
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in a cascade of shifting rainbows.
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But nacre isn’t just pretty—
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it’s one of the strongest and lightest biomaterials we know of.
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And it's not just oysters that produce it.
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In fact, numerous mollusk species deploy nacre
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as one of their primary defense mechanisms.
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If an intruding parasite or even a stray particle of sand irritates the mantle,
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the mollusk will coat the offender in nacre-producing cells
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to form what’s known as a pearl sac.
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These cells wrap the threat in layers of proteins and aragonite
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until eventually the cocoon completely absorbs the invader—
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dissolving the threat into an opalescent sphere of nacre.
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This defense mechanism is our leading theory for mollusks making pearls;
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transforming everyday intruders into timeless treasures.
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