Convoluta roscoffensis (Graff) has long been known for its symbiosis with a green flagellate definitively described from French stock as Platymonas convolutae by Parke and Manton (Parke & Manton, 1967). Provasoli subsequently discovered a species of Prasinocladus in a culture isolated from C. roscoffensis, but concluded that it was a surface contaminant of the animal (Provasoli, Yamasu & Manton, 1968).
Populations of C. roscoffensis from Aberthaw, South Wales (Mettam, 1979), and eighteen sites on Guernsey have been studied. In most patches of the Aberthaw colony, and in two of the Guernsey sites, two algal symbionts have been found. One of the Guernsey, and one of the Aberthaw symbionts appear identical to Platymonas convolutae.
They can be distinguished at the ultrastructural level by the presence of canaliculi which penetrate the pyrenoid, and are lined with the double-layered plastid envelope. In both cases the second flagellate shows the nucleus-pyrenoid complex typical of the genus Prasinocladus, where the nucleus penetrates the pyrenoid, and a pair of thylakoid membranes separate the pyrenoid from the starch shell (Parke & Manton, 1965). Neither symbiont has been identified specifically.
It is also possible to distinguish the two symbionts in the living animals, since the cup-shaped pyrenoid of the Prasinocladus type is easily distinguished from the spherical condition in Platymonas using the light microscope. A mixed population of symbionts has never been found in an individual worm. For each patch of animals in a colony it was possible to establish the percentage of animals containing each symbiont. This ratio varies from patch to patch in the colony, but has remained remarkably constant within each patch over the six months it has been studied. The Prasinocladus type always predominates at Aberthaw, the Platymonas type being absent in places.