The name
Ctenochasma was coined by the German paleontologist
Christian Erich Hermann von Meyer in 1851, based on a single lower jaw full of closely packed teeth which he gave the species name
Ctenochasma roemeri. Von Meyer did not consider the specimen to belong to a pterosaur; instead, he compared it to
Gnathosaurus, which at that time was considered to be a crocodilian. A second species,
C. gracile, was named by Oppel in 1862 based on a fragmentary skull. In the mid-20th century, the possibility was raised that these multi-toothed skulls with distinctive awl-shaped teeth might belong to birds or pterosaurs rather than
gharial-like crocodilians. However, it was not until the work of Peter Wellnhofer, who systematically reviewed known German pterosaur fossils in 1970, that
Ctenochasma and
Gnathosaurus became universally accepted as pterosaurs. An additional species,
C. porocristata, was named by
Paul de Buisonjé in 1981. However, it was differentiated mainly by the presence of a crest along the snout, which has since been shown to be a feature related to growth or sex, rather than species. A single specimen, consisting of a partial skull with complete brain case, was found in France and housed in the collections of the
Saint-Dizier Museum. Detailed comparison to other
Ctenochasma specimens in 2004 confirmed that it was a new species. Although researchers in the late 1990s and early 2000s, including Bennett and Jouve, suggested that all these species probably represented growth stages on just one kind of
Ctenochasma, in a more comprehensive 2007 study, Bennett demonstrated that three distinct species could be recognized based on the number and slenderness of the teeth, which varied across all growth stages.
C. roemeri, the earliest species, is characterized by its relatively low number of only moderately slender teeth. The later
C. taqueti had a moderate number of slender teeth, and the last species,
C. elegans, had a high number of very slender teeth. These three species, arranged chronologically, probably represent a single evolutionary lineage in which the filter-feeding apparatus was gradually refined. ==Description==