The genus is based on
holotype PIMUZ A/III 1225, three non-contiguous fragments of a
ramus (lower jaw) of the
mandible with
multicuspate teeth. Two teeth are preserved, one with three cusps, and one with four; despite this difference the authors consider them as essentially
isodont. The number of teeth is estimated at a minimum of twelve and a maximum of seventeen. A row of large oval
foramina runs parallel to the tooth row; foramina in the form of small holes in the
anterior part of the lower jaw suggest some sort of soft-tissue structure, or a
keratin covering. The jaw is light and hollow. The teeth of this genus resemble those of
Eudimorphodon, but the jaw is different. The discovery of this genus is a find of some significance, as there are few pterosaurs known from the Triassic. A second specimen, sometimes assigned to its own genus and species as
Raeticodactylus filisurensis, consists of a single disarticulated partial skeleton including an almost complete skull. The skull shows that it had a tall thin bony crest running along the midline of the front of the upper jaw, and a keel on the lower jaw. The teeth at the front of the upper jaw, in the
premaxillae, were fanglike, whereas the teeth in the upper cheeks (the
maxillae) had three, four, or five cusps, similar to those of
Eudimorphodon.
Caviramus had a wingspan of about 135 centimeters (53 in). ==Lifestyle==