Buitreraptor gonzalezorum is the only known species of the genus Buitreraptor. The genus name means "vulture raider", from the Spanish word buitre meaning vulture. Furthermore, the area in which the remains were found is called La Buitrera.
Buitreraptor lived about 90 million years ago, when South America was an isolated continent like Australia today. Buitreraptor has some different physical features than typical northern dromaeosaurs, such as Velociraptor. Buitreraptor has a slender snout with teeth that lack meat-tearing serrations. From this, the scientists who initially described it concluded that this dinosaur was not a hunter of relatively large animals like some other dromaeosaurs, but rather a hunter of small animals such as lizards and mammals. It most likely had feathers.
Other than Buitreraptor, the only other known dromaeosaurs from the southern continents are Neuquenraptor and Unenlagia from South America (discovered earlier in 2005), Rahonavis (once thought to be a true avian bird) from Madagascar, and unidentified dromaeosaur-like teeth from Australia. This discovery in the Southern Hemisphere helps to clarify that the dromaeosaur family was more widely dispersed around the world than previously thought. Evidence indicates that dromaeosaurs first appeared in the Jurassic Period, when all the continents were much closer together than they are today. It is possible that dromaeosaurids originated on the ancient continent Laurasia in the north and migrated to southern Gondwana, since the species known from the southern hemisphere bare distinctive characteristics not shared by their northern relatives.