Members of
Pentanogmius are stout plethodid fish with a fusiform morphology and a body depth of up to 40 cm (in
P. evolutus). The skull is roughly triangular in shape with the skull roof being largely formed by the large frontal bones. The dentary is dorsoventrally relatively slender in
P. fritschi and deeper with a noticeable "chin" in both
P. crieleyi and
P. evolutus. The tooth plate is broad and robust and overhangs the edges of the dentary. The individual teeth are villiform and minute, about 2 mm high, conical and strongly curved. Like other plethodid fish,
Pentanogmius had enlarged and high dorsal and anal fins. The dorsal fin starts just posterior to the skull and extends over most of the body until just before the deeply bifurcated caudal fin. In
P. evolutus every fin ray posterior to the apex is slightly shorter than the one preceding it, giving it an dorsally straight, declining form before ending rather abruptly on the final fin ray.
P. fritschi differs greatly from
P. evolutus in the shape of the dorsal fin. While
P. evolutus has a dorsal fin that gradually grows shorter the more posterior it is located, the one of
P. fritschi is greatly elongated in the anterior third of the body, reaching a height of up to 75 cm. The dorsal fin decreases in height abruptly following its apex and stops much further anterior than in
P. evolutus. This gives
P. fritschi a hook-shaped sail, superficially similar to those seen in modern-day
Marlin,
Swordfish and the extinct
Pachyrhizodus. Unlike
Pachyrhizodus and billfish however, species of
Pentanogmius possess small and weak pectoral fins located in a much more dorsal position on the body at around the same level as the orbits. The caudal fin is symmetrical and deeply forked in
P. evolutus while more luniform in
P. fritschi. The pelvic fins are small and located in the posterior half of the body, immediately followed by the anal fin. The anal fin in
P. evolutus and
P. fritschi mirror their respective species' dorsal fin, with the former's having a relatively straight edge and the later having an anal fin consisting of 6 clustered principal rods followed by 8 shorter fin rods. Little can be said about the European species of
Pentanogmius, as both
P. pentagon and
P. furcatus are poorly understood and were named from fragmentary remains. However, Taverna (2004) does show clear differences between the species based on the
dermobasihyal morphology. This part of the anatomy could not be observed in
P. fritschi, meaning that it cannot be ruled out that
P. fritschi may be synonymous with either European species. However, Shimada argues that there is a high degree of endemism among the tselfatiiform species of the Western Interior Seaway, with no tselfatiiform species being currently known to have inhabited two continents.
Pentanogmius evolutus is among the largest known tselfatiiform fish, with NHM P. 10610 measuring 172 cm in standard length (snout to last vertebrae) and 198 cm in total length (snout to the tip of the larger caudal fin). Specimen NHM P. 9202 reaches a similarly enormous size with 118.5 cm from the muzzle to the beginning of the caudal region. Only the Egyptian
Paranogmius exceeds it with a length of up to 3 meters.
P. fritschi was likewise able to grow to respectable lengths, with the holotype specimen measuring around 170 cm in total length (137 cm standard length). ==Phylogeny==