In previously reported laboratory experiments, infection of Rumex obtusifolius by the rust fungus Uromyces rumicis
was decreased on leaves which had prior herbivory by the beetle Gastrophysa viridula. In this paper we investigate
whether this interaction is robust for natural infection by a variety of fungi in field experiments carried out in
spring and autumn with plants given different levels of nitrogen fertilization. Grazing by G. viridula led to a
decrease in lesion density of Ramularia rubella and Venturia rumicis in the spring and V. rumicis and U. rumicis
in the autumn experiment. For V. rumicis and U. rumicis significant reductions in lesion density occurred on the
undamaged leaves of damaged plants, compared with similar leaves on undamaged plants, suggesting systemic
induced resistance. This induced resistance was usually independent of the amount of nitrogen fertilization,
although the inhibitory effect of grazing on R. rubella in the spring and V. rumicis in the autumn experiment was
enhanced by increasing nitrogen fertilization and was inhibited by increasing nitrogen fertilization for V. rumicis
in the spring. In both experiments, the lesion density of V. rumicis was greater on leaves on which R. rubella was
also present, and the presence of U. rumicis in the autumn experiment was linked to a similar but greater effect
on V. rumicis lesion density. We found no evidence of induced resistance by fungi against fungi in these
experiments. We highlight the complex interactions between inhibitory and facilitatory processes acting on leaf
fungal infection. These results are compared with the proposed molecular mechanisms of induced resistance(s)
and we consider the benefits of closer integration between molecular and ecological investigations of induced
resistances that occur in the field.