It is extremely rare for Paphiopedilum to get pollinated by accident. It would require an insect of the right size falling into the pouch of another Paph first, and then depositing the pollen picked up there on the stigma of the second flower it falls into.
More commonly, the ovary just looks fresh for considerable time after the flower has withered.
If the flower was pollinated, you don't need to do anything special for the plant. The pod will take 300-400 days to mature, and then you will have seed with unknown heritage (though developed by a Maudiae type plant).
There is no value to trying to sow seed with unknown parents. If you have a Paph growing in spaghnum, you could sow in the pot, and you might get a few seedlings out of that.
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Kim (Fair Orchids)
Founder of SPCOP (Society to Prevention of Cruelty to Orchid People), with the goal of barring the taxonomists from tinkering with established genera!
I am neither a 'lumper' nor a 'splitter', but I refuse to re-write millions of labels.
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