Hannah Roe / BBC Gio, a young man with brown hair in a red and black wetsuit proudly holds a small cat shark up to the camera.Hannah Roe / BBC

Gio Reale says saving marine life is ‘what he loves most’

A diver who has saved sharks along the Sussex coast says he puts his work on social media to help people appreciate British wildlife.

Gio Reale, from Brighton in East Sussex, has gone viral on social media for his efforts saving sharks, including finding a live egg on Brighton beach, then hatching and releasing the baby shark back into the wild.

The 25-year-old has also set up a hatchery at Brighton Watersports, which he says has helped to save hundreds of cuttlefish in the area.

Mr Reale said: “I just get in the water as much as I can – I walk along the beach all the time looking for washed up stuff.”

He added: “I started my social media as a hobby and it was when I started posting dives in places like Brighton, Bognor and Eastbourne, that the videos really started to get people’s attention.

“I just think the UK is so unexplored for diving.”

Mr Reale, who was born in Italy, says he has been diving since he was 11 and started posting videos on social media to show people how beautiful British marine life can be.

Hannah Roe / BBC A man with a metal pan filled with water and holding a fish. The man is tending to the shark and nursing it back to health.Hannah Roe / BBC

While filming with BBC South East, Mr Reale came across a stranded catshark, rescuing it and returning it to the sea

While speaking to BBC South East, Mr Reale found a live catshark on Brighton Beach mid-interview and was able to rescue it, nurse it back to strength and return it to the sea.

In 2023, he found a live egg case on Brighton beach, which he hatched at Brighton Watersports and then released the baby shark.

His video documenting this hatching has had 30 million views on Instagram.

He said catshark egg cases can wash up during stormy weather and that young sharks that have been caught and released can become disoriented and strand on beaches.

Mr Reale said, so far, there have been three sharks sucessfully reared and released and 200 cuttlefish saved at the Brighton Watersports hatchery.