A method to rapidly quantify predatory bacterial cell populations using resazurin reduction to resorufin and its resulting fluorescence kinetics (dF/dt) are described. The reliability of this method to measure the predatory populations was demonstrated with the type strain, Bdellovibrio bacteriovorus HD100, as well as B. bacteriovorus 109J and two natural isolates, Halobacteriovorax strains JA-1 and JA-3, with clear correlation when densities were between 107 and 109 PFU/ml. Resazurin was also used to evaluate how B. bacteriovorus HD100 and Halobacteriovorax strain JA-1 respond to harmful conditions, i.e., exposure to sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), with both the dF/dt and PFU/ml indicating Halobacteriovorax strain JA-1 is more sensitive to this surfactant. Tests were also performed using media of different osmolalities, with the dF/dt values matching the 24-h predatory activities reasonably well. Finally, this method was successfully applied in near real-time analyses of predator-prey dynamics and, when coupled with SDS, was capable of differentiating between the predatory and prey populations. All of these tests serve to prove this method is (i) very rapid, needing only 15 min from start to finish; (ii) very reliable with different predatory bacterial species; and (iii) very versatile as it can be easily adapted to measure predatory numbers and activities in a range of experiments.