[2] The blue eyed cockatoo's diet mainly consists of various seeds and nuts, berries, and fruits.
In the 1960s, researchers found it difficult to find the majestic bird due to their flight routes they took in these gardened forests.
Packs of the bird would fly 3,280 feet in the air, resulting in a difficult time catching a sighting of them.
Psittacine habits also suggest that blue-eyed cockatoos may make altitude and seasonal migratory movements throughout the year.
[4] Initially classified as a species of least concern by the IUCN in 2004, it is suspected to have become much rarer in recent times than was assumed previously.
[1] The threat of this species is most likely due to the rapid clearing of lowland forest into oil plantations, in which the blue-eyed cockatoo make its nesting sites.