A. felinus Originally described by Owen, the orbit is a 2.5 centimeters by 2 centimeters ellipse, and the nostril 1.3 centimeters wide and 0.9 centimeters long. The upper jaw has a maximum width of roughly 3.5 centimeters just below the orbits. At a little more than 7.5 centimeters long and 2 centimeters wide, the mandible spans almost the entirety of the skull. This particular specimen was preserved with the mouth closed, with the upper teeth fully covering the mandibular teeth. On the upper jaw, there are five incisors, a gap of 0.8 centimeters, a
canine (1.2 centimeters exposed, roughly 3.6 centimeters in total length), another 0.8 centimeter gap, and then five molars. After Owen removed the alveolar wall of the upper maxillary canine, he exposed the mandibular canine, which he found to be the same size as the maxillary. While Owen had originally assumed the holotype to be the skull of an adult, it has been argued that it was actually the skull of a juvenile. Owen only attributed its old age to the state of its sutures and teeth, while others noticed features indicating a young age, including its "...short snout, large orbits, slender postcanine teeth, tooth replacement, numerous small postcanine teeth, well developed foramina, large supraorbital portion of the frontal, anteriorly situated preparietal, slender skull arches, narrow vomer, well developed palatal tuberosities, teeth on transverse apophyses, large ectopterygoids, slender mandible, [and] open symphysis".
A. whaitsi First described by Robert Broom in 1911. The holotype of
A. whaitsi is another skull, but mostly snout, with the main indicator being a flatter symphysis. Its classification went back and forth throughout the entire century since it has very few defining features, all of which could be juvenile features of other genera.
A. polyodon First described by Broom in 1935. The holotype of
A. polyodon is a crushed snout. Originally named
Galerhinus polyodon, it was renamed
Aelurosaurus polyodon in 1970.
A. wilmanae First described by Broom in 1940. The holotype is a skull that is the best preserved of all the
Aelurosaurus species. The defining feature is a larger snout compared to A. felinus, but overall the skull is still small at just 11 centimeters long.
A.? watermeyeri First described by Broom in 1940. The holotype is a skull, and was originally named
Scylacocephalus watermeyeri. The genus is still under debate, since it shares features with both
Aelurosaurus (such as a large orbit and short snout) and
Aloposaurus (such as larger preparietal and postfrontal). == Geology/Paleoenvironment ==