Leo Schordje
wilted blossom
I have a number of parvi's, the "bloom and die" phenomena is real, but it is avoidable. For me one cause of "death after bloom" is that while it is in bloom, I take the plant out of the growing area, take photos, show it around, take it to shows or judging. During this period, sometimes I forget to keep a close eye on the plant, and it gets too dry, or too cold, or too hot. I have killed a few plants just by mishandling them while they were in bloom. Dry the roots out hard, new root tips die, providing a site for pathogens to infect the plant, fungal or bacterial rots.
Another possilble cause of "death after bloom" is that the plant was weak going into bloom. For my parvi's, if the plant is a weak single growth plant, I routinely cut the flower bud off as soon as it is high enough out of the leaves to do so without damaging the crown of the plant. The sooner you remove the flower bud the more energy the plant puts into making the next growth. I know this is a horrible thought to most people, but if the plant can not be replaced, as is the case with collected material, you should really be concerned more with getting the plant up to size rather than seeing what the flowers look like. Seed propagated plants and hybrids, I do let bloom, because they can be replaced. I have bloomed and rebloomed at least 10 Paph emersonii (I have about 16 of them) and have only lost 4 of the original 20 I bought. Paph emersonii & micranthum are the species that forced me to start the flower bud pruning on single growth plants.
Those are my thoughts, hope this idea helps
Another possilble cause of "death after bloom" is that the plant was weak going into bloom. For my parvi's, if the plant is a weak single growth plant, I routinely cut the flower bud off as soon as it is high enough out of the leaves to do so without damaging the crown of the plant. The sooner you remove the flower bud the more energy the plant puts into making the next growth. I know this is a horrible thought to most people, but if the plant can not be replaced, as is the case with collected material, you should really be concerned more with getting the plant up to size rather than seeing what the flowers look like. Seed propagated plants and hybrids, I do let bloom, because they can be replaced. I have bloomed and rebloomed at least 10 Paph emersonii (I have about 16 of them) and have only lost 4 of the original 20 I bought. Paph emersonii & micranthum are the species that forced me to start the flower bud pruning on single growth plants.
Those are my thoughts, hope this idea helps