During 2022–2024, extensive work on the assessment of the role of cephalopods in the Arctic ecosystems and foodweb shifts due to climate change was undertaken. Changes in cephalopod diversity, distribution and abundance in the Barents Sea were assessed using 18 years of annual bottom trawl data (2005–2022) (Golikov et al. 2024a). Taxonomic work was performed to clarify the situation of a dominant cephalopod that occurs widely within the Arctic basin (Golikov et al. 2023a). Using underwater video-imagery, a new behaviour of Arctic deep-sea bentho-pelagic cephalopods was discovered which may have consequences for trophic coupling between the seafloor and the water column (Golikov et al. 2023b). The Action validated a new methodology on how to apply trophic markers (= stable isotopes of carbon and nitrogen, δ13C and δ15N) to chitinous cephalopod beaks to obtain individual level stable isotope data and trajectories (Golikov et al. 2022, Xavier et al. 2022). This new methodology was successfully applied on historical and contemporary samples of the most abundant Arctic species of cephalopods from 1882 to 2019 (Golikov et al. 2024b). Finally, the recommendations were suggested about ecological monitoring of cephalopods using taxonomy, diversity, distribution and abundance-related parts of the work (Golikov et al. 2024a). Currently, ongoing activities include: 1. Environmental DNA data are being used to prepare the peer-reviewed scientific paper (lead by one of my collaborators); 2. Individual-level long-term trends in stable isotope signatures are being compared between cephalopods from the Arctic and Antarctic (Golikov et al. in preparation); and 3. The Action enabled the compilation of a database from literature and new data for a food web model of the Barents Sea (Golikov et al. in preparation).
Peer-reviewed scientific papers:
Golikov et al. 2022, doi: 10.3390/ani12243548
Golikov et al. 2023a, doi: 10.1186/s40851-023-00220-x
Golikov et al. 2023b, doi: 10.1098/rspb.2023.0640
Golikov et al. 2024a, doi: 10.3389/fmars.2024.1392585
Golikov et al. 2024b, in review
Xavier et al. 2022, doi: 10.3389/fphys.2022.1038064