Found in open
woodland, parks and gardens, the blue-faced honeyeater is common in northern and eastern Australia and southern
New Guinea. It appears to be sedentary in parts of its range and locally nomadic in other parts; however, the species has been little studied. Its diet is mostly composed of
invertebrates, supplemented with
nectar and
fruit. They often take over and renovate old
babbler nests, in which the female lays and
incubates two or rarely three
eggs.
Wikipedia