The fruits are eaten by several bird species, including the
Australasian figbird (
Sphecotheres vieilloti),
Lewin's honeyeater, (
Meliphaga lewinii),
olive-backed oriole (
Oriolus sagittatus),
white-headed pigeon (
Columba leucomela),
topknot pigeon (
Lopholaimus antarcticus),
brown cuckoo-dove (
Macropygia phasianella), and
Australian king parrot (
Alisterus scapularis). The
pied currawong (
Strepera graculina) also eats the fruit but regurgitates them, while new leafy growth is eaten by the
rainbow lorikeet (
Trichoglossus haematodus). It also serves as food for the larvae of the shining pencil-blue (
Candalides helenita), and the shining- or common oak-blue (
Arhopala micale). The
ladybird Scymnodes lividigaster feeds on the aphid
Aphis eugeniae, which feeds on the cheese tree.
Glochidion ferdinandi presumably is dependent on
leafflower moths (
Epicephala spp.) for its pollination, like other species of tree in the genus
Glochidion. Leafflower moths, including the species
Epicephala colymbetella, have been collected from fruit of this species. Although leafflower moths actively pollinate
Glochidion flowers, the adult moths also lay eggs inside the flowers, where their caterpillars later consume a subset of the developing seeds in the fruit.
G. ferdinandi is unusual (although not unique) among species of
Glochidion in that the fruit contain empty carpel chambers within which
E. colymbetella caterpillars pupate, and adult moths emerge.
Glochidion ferdinandi is a long-lived species which may live for 60 years or more. It may sucker or resprout after bushfire. Seeds take 1–4 months to germinate. ==Cultivation==