Abstract
Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is a vital food security and cash crop in Eritrea, yet bacterial and fungal pathogens responsible for 15–30% yield losses remain molecularly uncharacterized across its production systems. Here, we present the first nationwide amplicon-based metagenomic survey of potato pathogen communities, sampling 81 farms across 14 sub-regions spanning four agroclimatic regions during July–August 2023. High-throughput amplicon sequencing targeting the bacterial 16S rRNA V3–V4 region and fungal ITS1–ITS2 loci revealed pronounced geographic heterogeneity in community composition and alpha diversity. Pseudomonas spp. were ubiquitous, with a peak relative abundance of 32.5% in Dekemhare. Dominant fungi included Alternaria spp. (14.3% in Berik), Fusarium spp. (highest diversity 53.8% in Adi Kuala), Botrytis cinerea (36.9% in Adi Keih), and Rhizoctonia solani (44.4% in Adi Tekeliezan). Bacterial Shannon diversity averaged 5.67; fungal, 4.70. Weighted UniFrac PCoA accounted for 56.5% of bacterial community variance along PC1, confirming distinct geographic clustering. Potential pathogen-associated taxa of Pseudomonas, Alternaria, Fusarium, and Colletotrichum were detected in every asymptomatic sample examined, demonstrating the inadequacy of visual-only disease surveillance. These findings establish the first molecular baseline for potato-associated taxon diversity in Eritrea, providing the empirical foundation for region-specific integrated disease management and evidence-based seed certification protocols.
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