Quote:
Originally Posted by karrolhk
That's amazing! Just putting spent flower stalks will give you a baby orchid! Do you know WHY?
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I think Estación seca, James and SouthPark explained it in a way that's easy to grasp.
Meristems are basically the plant equivalent of stem cells, and will react differently according to what happens to the plant.
What triggers the differentiation into one type of cell or the other is a very complicated process, associated with tons of hormones and chemical reactions. Just look for stuff like apical dominance, growth regulators and so on.
If your Phal is sending an inflorescence and is doing fine, these meristem will be used to create the spike, flowers, branches etc.
If the plant undergoes stress and thinks it may die, it'll use meristems to clone itself and get its genes out there as a last resort.
In this case of stem cuttings, the meristems no longer receive the growth inhibitor signals from the plant, so they try to preserve the genome by reproducing.
This whole process is variable and not all plants (Phalaenopsis here) can pull it off. Phal aphrodite or schilleriana can easily, violacea not so much.
Some species, like stuartiana, can even grow new plants from damaged roots.
Here's another source explaining 2 techniques:
Orchideenvermehrung Ederer