Exopolysaccharides (EPS) are high-molecular-weight polymers composed of sugar residues that are secreted by microorganisms (bacteria, fungi, algae) into their surrounding environment. They form a major component of biofilms.
The production of EPS is often a response to various environmental conditions, including stress:
- Nutrient Availability:
- Low nutrient availability (Option a): Under nutrient limitation (especially when carbon is available but other nutrients like nitrogen or phosphorus are limiting), many microbes switch their metabolism towards EPS production. EPS can serve as a protective barrier, help in adhesion, or act as a reserve. This is a common trigger.
- Excess carbon source with limitation of another nutrient often stimulates EPS production.
- Stress Conditions: EPS production can be enhanced by various environmental stresses such as osmotic stress, desiccation, presence of toxic compounds (like antibiotics - option c, or heavy metals), extreme temperatures (option b - though specific temperature ranges might be optimal for certain EPS producers, extreme high temps are usually detrimental to growth overall).
- Biofilm Formation: EPS is crucial for the formation and structural integrity of biofilms, providing a protective matrix for the microbial community. Biofilm formation itself can be triggered by surface attachment or environmental cues.
- (d) Sunlight exposure: While relevant for photosynthetic microbes, it's not a universal trigger for EPS in all EPS-producing microbes in the same way nutrient stress is.
Considering the options, "Low nutrient availability" is a well-documented and significant factor that often induces or enhances exopolysaccharide production in many microorganisms as a survival or adaptive strategy. While other stresses like presence of antibiotics or temperature extremes can also influence EPS, nutrient limitation (especially an imbalance like C-excess and N/P-limitation) is a key trigger.
\[ \boxed{\text{Low nutrient availability}} \]