Warning after shark spotted near popular UK beach, as experts tell Brits to steer clear
A WARNING has been issued after a shark was spotted in ankle-deep water just off the coast of a popular UK beach.
Experts have urged people to stay away after footage emerged of the beast, thought to be a blue shark, lurking off the coast of Falmouth, Cornwall.
"Our worry is that it is injured or unwell and might need some medical attention.
"Our advice is to ignore it and give it a wide berth.
"It could be disorientated and it's best for our team to monitor it, to give it the space and time to do what it wants.
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"It could have just come for a look and will swim off when it's happy to, but if it's unwell we don't want to cause it any more stress by people getting into the water and interfering with it."
Harry Gooby, who filmed the shark, also said at one point the beast appeared to try and beach itself.
He said: "Its snout came out of the water and onto the beach.
"It almost nuzzled underneath its neck on the beach."
However, he called the big fish "fantastic".
Mr Gooby added: "Silently, slowly and elegantly this blue shark just sort of swam by."
More footage has also emerged of a woman helping the shark swim away from the bank.
Blue sharks can grow up to 12ft in length.
They have been known to go for humans and for boats out at sea and are therefore classified as a "dangerous" species.
They generally prowl the waters of the Mediterranean, but they can also be found in British waters.
The latest sighting comes just weeks after a snorkeller suffered a leg injury when she was bitten by a shark while swimming off the coast of Cornwall.
Local media suggests the woman had been out on a blue shark sightseeing trip at the time.
Recalling the incident, she said: "I just wanted to say that, despite how the trip ended, it was amazing to see such majestic creatures in the wild and I don't for a second want this freak event to tarnish the reputation of an already persecuted species.
"I wanted to thank everyone for their amazing actions.
"What was a very scary incident was made so much easier by the kindness and calmness of the people around me.
"Thank you to the trip team for getting me back to shore quickly and carefully and making me feel as safe as I possibly could.
"We all take these risks when we enter the habitat of a predator and we can never completely predict the actions of a wild animal."
SHARK SIGHTINGS
The attack follows a number of sightings reported along the south coast of England this year as beach goers have been told to remain vigilant.
In April, astonishing pictures emerged of what locals in Plymouth, Devon, believed to be an unusual starry smooth-hound shark.
The species - spotted swimming in a marina yards from a busy a tourist spot - is a shallow water variety rarely spotted in the UK.
Meanwhile, photos believed to be of a great white shark were captured by James Venn, 42, while he stood on the beach near Goring, West Sussex, on February 4.
At the time, Mr Venn told The Brighton Argus: "I went down to the beach to feed the birds when I saw something come up just behind the waves.
"At the time I thought it was a seal but, when I looked at the photos again, I thought it doesn't look like a seal."
Mr Venn then sent his snaps to experienced shark fisherman Graeme Pullen, 70, who said it was "obviously a shark".
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Mr Pullen, who has been catching sharks for 45 years even suggested the fin could belong to a "small, immature great white" that came close to the shore to feed on seals and bass.
The claims were later rubbished by harbour experts who said the 'fin' was a boat part which had come loose.