Anhanguera was a
fish-eating animal with a wingspan of about . Like many other anhanguerids,
Anhanguera had rounded crests at front of its upper and lower jaws, which were filled with angled, conical but curved teeth of various sizes and orientations. Like many of its relatives, the jaws were tapered in width, but expanded into a broad, spoon-shaped rosette at the tip. The jaw crests were not present in all
Anhanguera: those with crests may be of different age and/or sex from those without, and the crests may be influenced by sexual selection.
Anhanguera is distinguished from its relatives by subtle differences in the crest and teeth: unlike its close relatives
Coloborhynchus and
Ornithocheirus, the crest on the upper jaw of
Anhanguera did not begin at the tip of the snout, but was set farther back on the skull. Like many pteranodontoids, (most notably the
pteranodonts but also in anhanguerids such as
Ludodactylus)
Anhanguera had an additional crest protruding from the back of the skull. However, it was reduced to a small, blunt projection in these animals. A study in 2003 showed that
Anhanguera held its head at an angle to the ground due to its
inner ear structure, which helped the animal detect its
balance.
Anhanguera had bony rings in their eye sockets, called
scleral rings. These disks may have provided support to the pterosaur's eyes. Scleral rings are found in many extant species of vertebrates, including modern-day birds. The dubious species,
A. araripensis, has been described as similar in skull anatomy to other species of
Anhanguera, and possibly
Coloborhynchus, and the species is placed in either of these genera by various researchers. Like species referred to
Coloborhynchus, the snout tip was blunt and bore two forward-projecting teeth that emerged higher on the jaw than the rest of the tooth row. As in most other anhanguerids, the species bore a large, rounded crest at the tip of the jaws. Like
Coloborhynchus species, and unlike the type species of
Anhanguera, the crest of
A. araripensis emerged from the very tip of the blunted jaws, rather than further back on the jaw. However, unlike
Coloborhynchus,
A. araripensis lacked a dent or depression in the blunted jaw tip, and the teeth appear to have been smaller and more uniform in size. == Classification ==