Defoliation affected inflorescence production by oil palms, causing a decrease in sex ratio (ratio of female inflorescences to total) and an increase in abortion rate. Clones differed in response to defoliation. One of seven clones showed no increase in abortion rate; in one clone there was a tendency for female inflorescences to abort in greater numbers than males. The change in sex ratio occurred much sooner after defoliation in some clones than in others, and comparison of flowering records with dissections done at the time of defoliation indicated that inflorescence sex was affected at more than one stage in development. This has important consequences for attempts to predict yields.