Well said Ohio-guy! I alluded to that in my previous post in regards to Paph. rothschildianum. Poaching of newly discovered 'anything', especially a rather flamboyant orchid, will happen...that's part of human nature. Collectors want the 'new' whatever it takes. We (us on the forum) are not the ones who are causing the problem...we have the patience to wait until a new plant's population is built-up legally, however, for every one concerned orchid grower, there are far more who really don't give a damn, as long as they get that rare plant.
So the sad reality is that most if not all the PK will be exploited and the plant may well become extinct in the wild. It would not be the first 'creature' to fall victim to overzealous collectors. The poorer countries would unlikely have the resources to protect a newly discovered plant (or any creature for that matter) from unlawful collection (no insult meant to Peru but compared to USA, Canada, Australia and say the UK, Peru is poor). If that orchid had been discovered in the States, then it could well be better protected.
So now it falls upon the legal 'guardians' of PK to help spread the seeds/plants of PK throughout the rest of the world so that the pressure to collect the wild plants drops (assuming any are left by that time!). Peruflora has 5 different clones in their possession...a descent gene pool for them to reintroduce the plant once the 'wild' demand drops to the point where it is no longer profitable to the illegal collectors....as Ohio-guy said, repatriation. PK would not be the first nor will it be the last to have to go that route.