The bolt has a much smaller area than the copper sheath and so to reduce galvanic corrosion, it should have an identical or slightly more positive galvanic voltage than copper. The more negative (anodic) part is sacrificial to the positive (cathodic) part and so if the bolt was the sacrificial metal, it would soon fail because it is much smaller than the copper sheet and the corrosion would be concentrated on it. If the voltage difference is kept very small, say <1V, corrosion is minimised.
The galvanic series in sea wateris:
1. copper, ~-0.3 to -0.37V (sacrificial metal)
2. 410/416 stainless (passive), ~-0.23 to -0.35V
3. silicon bronze, ~-0.25 to -0.29V
4. nickel aluminium bronze. ~-0.14 to -0.22V
The best choice would seem to be 410/416 (passive) stainless or silicon bronze.