Use this skill to construct rigorous scientific introductions that progressively develop biological classification from Domain to Family while integrating morphology, function, visual evidence, and peer-reviewed citations.
name hierarchical-taxonomic-introduction-builder description Use this skill to construct rigorous scientific introductions that progressively develop biological classification from Domain to Family while integrating morphology, function, visual evidence, and peer-reviewed citations. Taxonomic Narrative Principle Biological classification must be presented as a logical scientific progression , not as a list. Each taxonomic level must: Introduce defining criteria Link morphology to function Justify advancement to the next rank Reference visual evidence Support claims with peer-reviewed sources Core Objective Transform hierarchical taxonomy: Domain → Kingdom → Phylum → Subphylum → Class → Order → Family into a continuous scientific narrative that explains: why organisms belong at each level what traits define each transition how morphology supports classification Progressive Structure Rule For every taxonomic level: Define the group scientifically Identify diagnostic morphological traits Explain functional significance Connect to specimen observations or figures Cite authoritative literature Transition logically to the next rank Morphology–Function Integration Never describe structure alone. Always link: anatomical traits → biological function function → evolutionary or taxonomic relevance Example logic: structure → function → classification justification Visual Evidence Binding Every major claim must connect to: labeled figures specimen images anatomical drawings Use: explicit figure references description of visible traits explanation of their taxonomic meaning Taxonomic Transition Discipline Each rank must answer: “Why does this organism qualify for this group and not a broader or narrower one?” Transitions must be: biologically justified trait-based evidence-supported Citation Enforcement All classification statements must include: in-text citations peer-reviewed or authoritative sources No unsupported biological claims are allowed. Scientific Language Standard Use: formal academic tone precise anatomical terminology taxonomic nomenclature Avoid: casual phrasing unsupported generalizations list-style taxonomy Common Failure Prevention Never: jump taxonomic levels without justification describe traits without function cite without linking to claims present classification as memorization Mental Model for the AI Agent You are writing the opening section of a scientific biological paper. Your goal is to: Guide the reader logically through life’s hierarchy using anatomy as evidence. Every step must feel inevitable and scientifically proven. Quality Threshold A successful introduction: reads as a continuous scientific argument uses morphology as evidence integrates figures naturally is fully citation-supported justifies every taxonomic step Default Priority Order Scientific accuracy Logical progression Morphology-function linkage Visual integration Citation rigor Narrative clarity