Horse shoe bats are becoming more and more rare due to buildings like Barns e.t.c in which they roost are being converted or becoming derelict.
Their habitats are also being lost through changes in land-use or farming practices and the removal and change of the countryside in general such as hedgerows.
There is also evidence that they can be poisoned by crop insecticides.
Horseshoe bats eat frogs.they do not exist.they are cool
A Cape Horseshoe bat eats insects
What is the life of a Mediterranean horseshoe bat.
the horseshoe bat
it is manner
No. The Greater Horseshoe Bat is a carnivore.
there are only fourteen left
The horseshoe had come off, so the farrier reattached it.
their horseshoe crabs so everyone makes fun of them
The spikes on a horseshoe crab protect it from being attacked.
not so sure
The obvious reason is that you can shoe a horse with them. Some people also believe that a horseshoe brings good luck (from the historic fact that they are made of iron; iron was extremely rare, so if someone was fortunate enough to find any it was assumed they had good luck - the most common way for a commoner to find any amount of iron was a horseshoe on the side of the road).