Size and weight Nyctosaurus was similar in anatomy to its close relative and contemporary,
Pteranodon. It had relatively long wings, similar in shape to modern seabirds. However, it was much smaller overall than
Pteranodon, with an adult wingspan of little over .
Skull and beak Some skull specimens preserve a distinctively large crest, at least tall in the older adults, which was relatively gigantic compared to the rest of the body, while also being over three times the length of the head. The crest is composed of two long, grooved spars, one pointed upward and the other backward, arising from a common base projecting up and back from the back of the skull. The two spars were nearly equal in length, and both were nearly as long or longer than the total length of the body. The upward-pointing crest spar was at least long and the backward-pointing spar was at least long. The jaws of
Nyctosaurus were long and extremely pointed. The jaw tips were thin and needle sharp, and are often broken off in fossil specimens, giving the appearance that one jaw is longer than the other, though in life they were probably equal in length.
Wings Nyctosaurus had wings very similar in built to those of its relative
Pteranodon, which have a high
aspect ratio and low
wing loadings. The wing structure generally resembles that of the modern-day albatross, and therefore also flew like it. Unlike the related
Pteranodon however,
Nyctosaurus was much smaller in size, and had a relatively shorter wingspan, though still large compared to earlier pterosaurs.
Forelimbs Like the closely related
Pteranodon,
Nyctosaurus also had relatively long forelimbs compared to other earlier genera. Most of the tendons of the upper arm and forearm were mineralized within, this is a unique feature only seen in nyctosaurids, another of which was the related
Muzquizopteryx. Another distinctive feature seen in
Nyctosaurus was that it only had three
phalanges instead of four, as seen in other
pterodactyloids, this trait is rarely seen in other pterosaurs, and perhaps may have been an
autapomorphy only found in
Nyctosaurus.
Nyctosaurus had unusually elongated
metacarpals which measured about 2.5 times the length of its
humerus. Proportions such as these can only be seen in two other groups of pterosaurs: the
pteranodontids and the
azhdarchids. Another feature that
Nyctosaurus had in common with
Pteranodon was its wing fingers, which occupied about 55 percent of the whole wing. Studies on
Nyctosaurus anatomy have concluded that the first, second and third metacarpals have lost contact with the
carpus, similar to pteranodontids, but unlike them,
Nyctosaurus, and possibly other nyctosaurids, had also lost the corresponding digits except the "flight" digit. As a result, it was likely to have impaired its movement on the ground, leading scientists to conjecture that it spent almost all of its time on the wing and rarely landed. In particular, the lack of claws with which to grip surfaces would have made climbing or clinging to cliffs and tree trunks impossible for
Nyctosaurus.
Hindlimbs Contrary to its elongated forelimbs,
Nyctosaurus had proportionally short hindlimbs compared to the overall body size. Analyses show that
Nyctosaurus had the shortest hindlimbs of any pterosaur genera, in terms of hindlimb-to-body ratio, at only around 16 percent the size of its wing. ==Classification==