The Galgadracoholotype specimen, CPPLIP 1853, was discovered in outcrops of the Serra da Galga Formation, about 25 kilometres (16 mi) north of Uberaba, Brazil. The specimen comprises an isolated fragment of the rostrum, deriving from near the tip of the upper jaw.[1]
In 2025, Giaretta and colleagues describedGalgadraco zephyrius as a new genus and species of azhdarchid pterosaurus based on these fossil remains. The generic name, Galgadraco, combines a reference to both the Serra da Galga Formation and Galga Hill, with the Latin word draco, meaning "dragon". The specific name, zephyrius, is derived from Zéphuros (Ζέφυρος), the Ancient Greek embodiment of the west wind.[1]
Description
Speculative paleoenvironmental restoration of the Serra da Galga Formation with Galgadraco individuals in the foreground
Based on the proposed close relationships with Albadraco and similarities of the proportions and size of the overlapping rostral elements, Giaretta and colleagues determined that the holotypes of these two pterosaurs would have come from individuals of comparable body sizes. The fourth cervical (neck) vertebra of Albadraco has a maximum width of 7 centimetres (2.8 in) at the prezygapophyses, similar to the corresponding element in Quetzalcoatlus lawsoni. From this, they concluded that a wingspan of around 4–5 m (13–16 ft) was fitting, making Galgadraco a medium-to-large-sized pterosaur,.[1] not a giant one like Quetzalcoatlus northropi or a small taxon like Tsogtopteryx.[2][3]
Classification
To determine the relationships and affinities of Galgadraco, Giaretta and colleagues scored it in a comprehensive pterosaur-focused phylogenetic matrix modified from Zhou et al. (2025),[4] deriving from Pêgas (2024).[5] Their analyses recovered Galgadraco as the sister taxon to the Romanian Albadraco,[6] in a clade also containing Hatzegopteryx, Cryodrakon, and Tsogtopteryx. The results are displayed in the cladogram below,[1] with clade names following Pêgas et al. (2025):[3]