For ultrafiltration, and membrane filtration more generally, the quantitative determination of the modes of fouling remains a subject of great interest. Herein a clear method for determining the modes from a time series of volumetric flux J(t) is given and illustrated with previously published filtration data of bergamot juice (Journal of Membrane Science 524 (2017) 108-116). The emphasis is upon the robust methodology which is of general applicability and offers a straightforward approach to the modelling of flux decline. The method is best viewed as being an empirical method that determines the point at which there is a switch from one mode to another is determined in a clear-cut manner and it yields excellent equations for J(t). For the example chosen, the initial 4 L/m2 generates some pore blocking after which the main mode of fouling is cake build-up. The variation of overall resistance with time is also informative and analysis of this series was used to check the result for the initial phase of fouling as determined from the time series of volumetric flux. A strength of the integral approach is that it enables one to establish whether the initial fouling is different in character from the subsequent fouling. Having this information can improve membrane selection and overall membrane filtration performance.