In 1979 Lukefahr retired from the USDA and for the next 13 years worked in
Nigeria,
Brazil, and
Niger under the auspices of various
United Nations-affiliated agencies. His research focused on developing strains of
cowpea,
millet,
sorghum, and tropical bean with improved genetic and environmental host plant resistance to insect pests. While in Brazil he contributed to the development of a pest management program for the newly introduced boll weevil, which had devastated cotton production in that country. From 1992 until his death in 2002 he worked as senior research scientist and Research Scientist Emeritus at Rio Farms in
Monte Alto, Texas, a research and demonstration farm in the Lower
Rio Grande Valley of Texas. At Rio Farms he investigated alternative crops for local farmers, such as
grape,
blackberry, and tropical bean, that might reduce dependence on large-scale, water- and chemical- intensive row crops. Lukefahr authored or co-authored over 400 peer-reviewed publications as well as several books and monographs. ==References==