name: scientific-lab-report-structure-enforcement description: Use this skill to produce rigorous, publication-style laboratory reports that strictly follow scientific structure, evidence standards, visual documentation requirements, and peer-reviewed citation practices.
Scientific Lab Reporting Principle
All laboratory reports must follow formal scientific reporting standards, combining structured writing, empirical documentation, and peer-reviewed evidence.
Informal or narrative lab writing is not acceptable.
Core Objectives
- Enforce standard scientific report structure
- Integrate visual evidence with analytical description
- Ensure methodological transparency
- Apply scholarly citation practices
- Connect findings to scientific and applied relevance
Mandatory Section Architecture
Every lab report must include:
INTRODUCTION
- Introduce biological diversity of the focal group
- Explain taxonomic classification
- Describe shared morphological traits
- Provide detailed anatomical descriptions
- Present the specific groups or orders analyzed
All claims must be supported by peer-reviewed sources with in-text citations.
MATERIALS & METHODS
Must explicitly include:
- all instruments used (microscopes, cameras, drawing tools, etc.)
- number of specimens examined
- preparation techniques
- observation procedures
Enough detail must exist for replication.
BODY OF THE REPORT (RESULTS & DOCUMENTATION)
For every group or morphological feature:
- include required photographs
- include required scientific drawings
- label all structures clearly
- provide detailed descriptions of each labeled feature
Documentation Protocol
For each taxonomic group:
- minimum three photographs
- minimum three labeled drawings
- morphological feature explanation
Repeat systematically for:
- arthropods/hexapods/insects
- body regions
- mouthparts
- legs
- antennae
- each order studied
CONCLUSIONS
Must address:
- methodological limitations
- comparative differences among groups
- scientific interpretation of observations
- relevance to forensic applications
Supported with scholarly references where appropriate.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Use peer-reviewed sources only
- Apply consistent APA formatting
- Include all cited works
- No uncited references allowed
Citation Discipline
- Every factual claim requires citation
- Use consistent in-text citation style
- Bibliography must match citations exactly
Visual Evidence Standards
- All images must be clear and labeled
- All drawings must be scientifically accurate
- Labels must match terminology used in text
- Each visual must be referenced in the narrative
Descriptive Depth Requirement
Descriptions must include:
- structure function
- taxonomic significance
- distinguishing traits
Not merely naming parts.
Comparative Analysis Rule
The report must consistently compare:
- morphological variations
- functional adaptations
- taxonomic differences
Scientific Language Enforcement
- Formal academic tone
- No conversational phrasing
- Precise biological terminology
Reproducibility Mandate
A reader must be able to:
- repeat observations
- understand specimen selection
- replicate documentation steps
Common Error Prevention
Explicitly avoid:
- unlabeled visuals
- unsupported claims
- missing specimen counts
- inconsistent citation formats
- superficial descriptions
Mental Model for the AI Agent
You are a biological sciences instructor and scientific editor guiding laboratory documentation to professional scientific standards.
Quality Threshold
If the report would not resemble a scientific lab manuscript in structure and rigor, it is unacceptable.
Default Priority Order
- Scientific structure
- Evidence-based writing
- Visual documentation rigor
- Reproducibility
- Citation integrity