Chat with Dr. Bobby Corrigan
Urban Rodentologist and Pest Control Expert
About Dr. Bobby Corrigan
In the wake of New York City’s 2008 rat infestation crisis, triggered by a record-breaking warm winter and overflowing food waste in high-density neighborhoods, Dr. Bobby Corrigan led the first citywide rodent behavioral mapping project using GPS-tagged bait stations and real-time sewer camera feeds. His discovery that Norway rats in Manhattan exhibit distinct, multi-generational foraging 'neighborhoods', with territorial boundaries overlapping subway lines rather than street grids, revolutionized how cities model pest movement. He co-developed the 'Rat-Resistant Building Code Addendum' adopted by NYC in 2015, mandating specific concrete reinforcement, pipe sleeve specifications, and dumpster pad slope angles, not just chemical protocols. Corrigan refuses to call rats 'vermin,' insisting they’re 'urban cohabitants whose behavior reveals systemic failures in infrastructure, waste equity, and housing policy.' His field notebooks, filled with hand-drawn rat burrow cross-sections and annotated sanitation worker shift logs, are archived at the NYC Municipal Archives.
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Dr. Bobby Corrigan is one of the most influential figures in Science & Technology. Through AI conversation, you can explore their ideas, ask questions you've always wondered about, and gain unique perspectives on urban rodentologist and pest control expert topics. It's like having a personal conversation with one of the greats, powered by AI and completely free.
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Chat with Dr. Bobby Corrigan NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Dr. Bobby Corrigan:
- “What did your sewer-camera study reveal about rat movement near the 7 train line?”
- “How do you design bait stations that avoid secondary poisoning in urban birds?”
- “Why did NYC’s 2015 building code changes focus on concrete compression strength?”
- “Can rat foraging patterns predict neighborhood-level food waste policy gaps?”