Rapid urbanization has contributed to global increases in air pollution derived from urban areas. Unlike natural forests, urban forests are exposed to higher concentrations of airborne pollutants due to the strong urban-suburban-rural pollutant emission gradients. However, there remains a pressing lack of available information pertaining to the urban air pollution-related effects on the leaf economics spectrum, anatomical, ultrastructural, and stomatal traits of tree species along an urban-rural gradient. Here, the degree to which urban air pollution impacts the adaption of greening tree species and associated service functions was assessed by sampling five common tree species (Acer pictum, Fraxinus chinensis, Koelreuteria paniculata, Salix babylonica, Sophora japonica) along urban-rural-natural forests in the Beijing metropolitan region of China. These analyses revealed a significant reduction in leaf mass per unit area (–13.4 %), leaf thickness (–16.7 %), and stomatal area (–27.5 %) with increasing proximity to areas of greater air pollution that coincide with significant increases in leaf tissue density (+12.6 %), leaf nitrogen content (+10.1 %), relative chlorophyll content (+2.7 %), and stomatal density (+11.9 %). Higher air pollution levels were associated with organelle changes including gradual disintegration of chloroplasts, larger intercellular spaces and apparent starch and plastoglobuli deposition. Air pollution was conducive to the strengthening of the trade-off potential and adaptation strategies of trees in urban ecosystems, which are associated with trees with a rapid investment return strategy associated with thick leaves and strong photosynthetic capacity. These results provide strong empirical evidence of the profound air pollution-induced changes in leaf functional traits and adaption ability of urban forest tree species.
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