Practice placing organisms into the eight-level taxonomic hierarchy, from domain to species, and writing a correct binomial name, with fresh problems and an answer key.
You are a biology tutor who has watched students recite "Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Soup" perfectly and still place an organism at the wrong rank, because the mnemonic gives the order of the eight levels, domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species, but says nothing about what actually separates one rank from the next. Set [RANK_FOCUS:select:full eight-rank hierarchy,domain and kingdom only,binomial nomenclature and species naming] and [DIFFICULTY:select:familiar organisms like humans and common pets,less familiar organisms across multiple kingdoms]. For full-hierarchy mode, generate a real organism at the difficulty level I chose and ask me to place it at all eight ranks, from the broadest, domain, either Bacteria, Archaea, or Eukarya, down to the narrowest, species. After I answer, or if I ask you to just show the answer, give the correct classification at every rank and explain, at each step, what specific shared trait moved the organism into that rank rather than a neighboring one, since two organisms can share a kingdom and phylum and still split apart at class or order based on one defining feature. For domain-and-kingdom mode, focus only on the top two ranks. Explain the difference between the three domains, Bacteria and Archaea being prokaryotic single-celled organisms distinguished from each other mostly by cell wall chemistry and the extreme environments Archaea often tolerate, and Eukarya covering everything with a membrane-bound nucleus, then explain how Eukarya splits into the traditional kingdoms, Animalia, Plantae, Fungi, and Protista, based on traits like whether the organism makes its own food, whether its cells have a rigid wall, and how many cells it has. Give me a specific organism and ask me to place it at both ranks with a one-sentence reason for each. For binomial-nomenclature mode, teach the naming rules directly: a scientific name is always genus followed by species, the genus is capitalized and the species is lowercase, and the whole name is italicized or underlined, like Homo sapiens or Panthera leo. Give me an organism's common name and ask me to write its correct binomial name following those formatting rules, and if I get the capitalization or italics wrong, point out specifically which rule I broke instead of only giving the correct answer. If I ask why classification changes over time, such as why some sources now list six kingdoms or split Protista further, explain that taxonomy is revised as new evidence, especially DNA comparison, reveals that organisms once grouped together aren't as closely related as they looked, rather than treating the current system as permanently fixed.
Use this prompt anywhere
10,000+ expert prompts for ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and wherever you use AI.
Get Early Access"Dear King Philip Came Over For Good Soup" gets the order of the eight taxonomic ranks right, domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species, every time. What it doesn't teach is what actually separates one rank from the next, which is the part that trips students up on an actual classification question.
This tool generates a real organism and asks you to place it at every rank, then explains, at each step, the specific shared trait that put it there instead of a neighboring group. Set [RANK_FOCUS] to work the full eight-level hierarchy, narrow in on just domain and kingdom, where the biggest conceptual jumps happen, or drill binomial nomenclature, the genus-species naming rules, capitalization, and italics, that most students get partly wrong on a first attempt.
[DIFFICULTY] scales from familiar organisms like humans and common pets up to less familiar organisms spread across multiple kingdoms, so practice doesn't stay stuck on the same handful of textbook examples.
Run it in the Dock Editor to build a full practice set, or pair it with the prokaryotic vs eukaryotic cell comparison practice generator for the cellular traits that actually justify the domain-level split, or the natural selection and evolution explainer for why today's classification tree keeps getting revised as new evidence comes in.
Copy the prompt into your AI assistant of choice, the Dock Editor, ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini. Set [RANK_FOCUS] to the full eight-rank hierarchy, domain and kingdom only, or binomial nomenclature, and set [DIFFICULTY] to familiar or less familiar organisms.
Place the organism at every rank your mode covers before checking the answer, so you're testing recall instead of reading a worked example first.
Every correct placement comes with the specific shared trait that earned it, so you learn what defines a rank, not just what the label is.
In binomial-nomenclature mode, write the scientific name from a common name and get the exact capitalization or italics rule named if you get it wrong.
Practice full eight-rank classification for an upcoming quiz, with the reasoning behind each rank explained instead of a chart to memorize.
Narrow in on domain and kingdom mode to nail down the traits that actually separate Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya before an exam question tests it directly.
Drill binomial nomenclature specifically, catching capitalization and italics mistakes that are easy to make and easy for a rubric to penalize.
Generate a full set of organisms across kingdoms in advance to use as warm-up questions or a printable classification worksheet.
Discover more prompts that could help with your workflow.
Explain active and passive transport by energy cost and gradient direction, identify the mechanism behind a scenario, or walk through the sodium-potassium pump cycle.
Explain negative and positive feedback through the receptor-control center-effector model, judge a scenario's feedback type, or map the model onto a body system.
Build a monohybrid or dihybrid Punnett square from given parent genotypes, with every gamete generated, every box filled in, and genotype and phenotype ratios verified.
10,000+ expert-curated prompts for ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and wherever you use AI. Our extension helps any prompt deliver better results.