The measurement of the fluorescent 4-methyl-7-coumarinylamine released from the hydrolysis of a non-fluorescent peptide model substrate by exoproteolytic enzymes has been adapted to flow injection analysis (FIA). FIA allows samples to be processed very quickly (less than 2 min for triplicate determinations) with good sensitivity (< 0.1 μM) and reproducibility (relative standard deviation < 3% at the 0.2 μM level). In a coastal marine pond, exoproteolytic activity was closely related to bacterioplankton biomass. The high activity measured in pond water (maximum velocity: VM = 1.46 to 2.54 μM.h−1) emphasizes the importance of dissolved protein hydrolysis for bacterial growth and for dissolved organic nitrogen cycling. The mean turnover time of dissolved peptides was 7.6 days, and amino acids liberated by exoproteolytic activity could potentially support, on average, 40% of the bacterial nitrogen demand.