Interesting! Well Fascinating!
I happen to be an organic farmer, - as well as a conventional one, (different slabs of land), so I am rather familiar with the odds and ends...untill it comes to pesticides, which, due to cool climate where I live, do not get used very much.
The torture of going organic is the couple of years of very low output, where there is a question whether you are bankrupt before having proper yeald again. At the end of the day, money is the boss....sad but true.
In our case the problem has to do with pH, weeds, and crops. However, if you manage it over "the hill", crops are o.k., weeds are something that takes quite some skill and work to tackle, and the pH will fix itself,- in my case it went from 5.4-5.6 ish to 6-6.2.
Now,to pesticide....I may have the wrong word? In my understanding the English word "Herbicide" goes for the weed campaign, "Fungicide" for the fungus campaign, and "Pesticide" for the insect campaign.
As a sidenote, - of interest for you perhaps, - where I live, we have practically no insect that damages potatoes or carrots, but turnips are a pain. We have no problems with fungus in barley or oats, but they can be a pain in potatoes. Weeds are not much of a problem, and can frequently be dealt with by mechanical means (notably in potato growing).
However, it can be a pain getting weeds out if you choose to go from "row growing" to flat-field, - and in those cases the popular stuff is called "harmony".
Anyway, nice meeting someone who is a pro in the business
