Feilongus youngi
There's a photo of a lovely new pterosaur fossil below the fold.

a, Skull. b, Drawing showing the contact of cranial bones (the posterior part of the skull is rotated for clarity). c, Reconstruction. Scale bars, 50 mm. ang, angular; art, articular; at, atlas; bo, basioccipital; bs, basisphenoid; d, dentary; dep, depression; f, frontal; fo, foramen; fola, foramen lacrimale; hy, hyoid bone; j, jugal; la, lacrimal; ltf, lower temporal fenestra; m, maxilla; n, nasal; naof, nasoantorbital fenestra; op, opisthotic; or, orbit; p, parietal; pcr, parietal crest; pf, prefrontal; pl, palatine; pm, premaxilla; pmcr, premaxillary crest; prn, processus nasalis; pty, pterygoid; q, quadrate; qj, quadratojugal; san, surangular; scl, slerotic ring; sor, supraorbital; spl, splenial; sq, squamosal; utf, upper temporal fenestra. l indicates left and r indicates right.
One other cool thing about the assemblage they're digging up in China is that it suggests a few things about the distribution of species: pterosaurs and few birds on the coasts, birds and few pterosaurs inland.
The Jehol deposits constitute an opportunity to examine the question related to the interaction (and competition) between pterosaurs and birds. The Yixian Formation has furnished an estimated 40 pterosaur remains and more than 1,000 birds. The Jiufotang Formation recorded about 100 pterosaur remains compared with the remains of more than 1,000 birds. Overall, there are 21 avian species described and we know of at least five more. Including the two new pterosaurs described here, there are 13 described and 3 undescribed species. This preliminary analysis clearly shows that birds are more diverse and outnumber pterosaurs (in both the Yixian and Jiufotang formations). This information and comparisons with other deposits leads to the hypothesis that the avian fauna of the Lower Cretaceousand perhaps most of the Mesozoic erawas more confined to terrestrial, inland regions, whereas pterosaurs dominated the coastal areas. The Jehol deposits are unique Cretaceous terrestrial ecosystems where this question can be refined in the future with more precise stratigraphic information regarding the co-occurrence of these volant creatures.
Wang X, Kellner AWA, Zhou Z, Campos Dde A (2005)Pterosaur diversity and faunal turnover in Cretaceous terrestrial ecosystems in China. Nature 437(7060):875-880.

Pterosaurs catching fish? Birds catching bugs in the woods? Any speculations yet?