David Cushing was Britain's foremost twentieth-century marine fisheries ecologist, who did more than anyone else to develop the subject into a distinctive science over a career of more than 50 years. He was born and raised in Northumberland, and took both his first degree and a DPhil at Oxford, separated by war service in the Royal Artillery. He married Diana Antona-Traversi in 1943, and they had one daughter, Camilla. He worked for the whole of his career at the Fisheries Laboratory, Lowestoft, where he started in 1946 as a scientific officer, studying plankton off the northeast coast of England, and eventually becoming deputy director and head of the Fish Population Dynamics Division until his retirement in 1980. He published around 200 papers and reports, and wrote 11 books on marine ecology and fisheries, with four principal areas of interest: fisheries acoustics; planktonic biological production in the sea; the causes of the collapse of the North Sea herring; and the factors controlling recruitment of young fish, notably the influences of stock size and of climate. He famously proposed the match/mismatch hypothesis to explain how the great variability of fish recruitment arises from minor variations in climate from year to year. He died on 14 March 2008, on his eighty-eighth birthday.