The holotype associated with
Plotopterum, the humeral end of a left coracoid, was roughly the size of those of the extant
Brandt's cormorant, but narrower and more rounded. Several of its characteristics, such as the outline of the head, the shape of the bone, the scapular facet and its adjacent shaft were described as reminiscent of
cormorants and
anhingas. However, other characteristics, such as the head hanging over the shaft and the shape of the triosseal region, were more typical of diving birds, like
penguins and
auks, unrelated groups presenting flipper-like wings well adapted for swimming. The shape of the triosseal area, swollen in its lower portion and narrowed anteroposteriorly, was presumably occupied by the pectoral tendon, and strengthened the wing when the animal was swimming. Contrary to its distant relative, the
flightless cormorant, the wings of
Plotopterum were not reduced by the lack of use, but were heavily specialized in swimming, The almost complete femur tentatively attributed to the genus in 1985, MFM 1800, shared similarities with
Anhingidae, and the individual it belonged to was probably smaller than those of its
Oligocene relatives, approximately the size of a
great cormorant.
Plotopterum is an outlier compared to other plotopterids. Despite being stratigraphically the youngest genus of plotopterid, most of its larger relatives going extinct at the end of the
Oligocene, it seems to have kept primitive characteristics and was not as specialized for wing-propelled diving than other, older but more derived plotopterids. It has been suggested that the isolation of the
ghost lineage limited to the Miocene of
California and
Japan to which belong
Plotopterum, sister taxon to all other plotopterids from the
Oligocene of the
Pacific Northwest and
Japan, may have permitted the preservation of basal traits. ==Paleoenvironment==