The production and composition of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) in axenic batch cultures of the benthic marine epipelic
diatoms Navicula salinarum and Cylindrotheca closterium were investigated. EPS was secreted into the medium and the bulk was loosely
associated with the cells. Neither N. salinarum nor C. closterium formed a well-defined polysaccharide capsule. EPS of both N. salinarum
and C. closterium consisted predominantly of polysaccharide but small quantities of protein were present as well. EPS also contained uronic
acids and SO42− groups. Analysis of monosaccharides using gas chromatography showed that for both species glucose and xylose were
the main constituents, but several other monosaccharides were present in smaller quantities. Two fractions of EPS were distinguished: a
small amount was secreted into the medium and a second fraction was extracted in water at 30°C. For both species the two fractions
differed somewhat in composition, indicating that they represented two different types of EPS. The EPS produced by N. salinarum and by
C. closterium differed in their composition. The rate of EPS production in batch culture was highest during the transition from exponential
growth to stationary growth. Negatively charged groups such as uronic acids and sulphated sugars determine the adhesion capacity of
EPS and probably play an important role in the stabilization of intertidal sediments on which these diatoms grow and produce biofilms.