Relative Growth Rate Calculator
Calculate the exponential growth rate of a population, organism, or investment over time.
Results:
Relative Growth Rate: 0 per unit of time
Percentage Growth: 0%
What is Relative Growth Rate (RGR)?
The Relative Growth Rate (RGR) is a measure used to quantify the speed of growth relative to the size of the individual or population. Unlike absolute growth rate, which measures how much something grows in total, RGR accounts for the initial size, making it a "rate per unit of existing material." It is a fundamental metric in plant physiology, ecology, and microbiology.
The RGR Formula
To calculate the mean relative growth rate over a specific time interval, the following logarithmic formula is commonly used:
RGR = (ln(W2) - ln(W1)) / (t2 - t1)
- W1: Initial value (weight, height, or population size)
- W2: Final value after the time period
- t2 – t1: The total time elapsed between measurements
- ln: The natural logarithm
Practical Example
Suppose you are tracking the biomass of a seedling. On Day 1, its weight is 2.0 grams. On Day 10, its weight has increased to 5.5 grams.
| Step | Calculation |
|---|---|
| 1. Log of Final (ln 5.5) | ~1.7047 |
| 2. Log of Initial (ln 2.0) | ~0.6931 |
| 3. Difference | 1.0116 |
| 4. Divide by Time (9 days) | 0.1124 g/g/day |
Why RGR Matters
In biology, RGR helps researchers compare plants of different sizes. A smaller plant may have a lower absolute growth rate than a large tree, but its relative growth rate might be much higher because it is investing more energy into new tissue formation. In finance, this logic is similar to looking at the "compound growth rate" of an asset.
Common Use Cases
- Agriculture: Evaluating the efficiency of different fertilizers on crop growth.
- Bacteriology: Determining the generation time of a bacterial colony.
- Economics: Analyzing the growth of startups compared to established corporations.
- Environmental Science: Measuring the recovery rate of a forest after a wildfire.