Results/Conclusions At the landscape scale, the time-series of historic air photos and satellite imagery, interpreted for 4-km2 areas of interest (AOIs) within the larger study area, showed the greatest changes occurring in recently deglaciated areas, as expected. The conversion from ice-covered or barren areas to shrubland over the 50-year period ranged from 0% to 43% of a given AOI, across the age gradient. Conversion from shrub to tree cover ranged from 0% to 3%. Shrub cover remained relatively stable in most AOIs, with >90% of shrub cover unchanged. At the community scale, ordination using nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) indicated distinct groupings by life form, and vectors showed a trend toward later successional species in early to mid-seral groups. Mean species richness increased 50% in the the non-forested groups (early to mid-seral tall shrub, coastal meadow, and dwarf shrub-forb). Although the direction of change (toward increased shrub cover and species richness) was more consistent on the recently deglaciated sites, we nevertheless found evidence of similar changes occurring on the older landscapes.