ap

Skip to content

Beloved Denver Zoo cheetah, Marvin, leaves behind brother, mourning zoo staff

Brother Mojo can be spotted in the cheetah exhibit, missing his lifelong buddy

Elizabeth Hernandez in Denver on Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2025. (Photo by Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:
Getting your player ready...
Marvin the Cheetah passed away Wednesday at the Denver Zoo after struggling with health problems.
Photo courtesy The Denver Zoo
Marvin the Cheetah passed away Wednesday at the Denver Zoo after struggling with health problems.

Marvin the cheetah leaves behind his brother Mojo and a mourning zoo staff after a host of health issues resulted in his passing on Wednesday night, zoo officials said Thursday.

The 8-year-old cheetah, known for sunbathing with Mojo in the tall grasses of their habitat, struggled through a progressive neurological disorder along with snowballing health issues including an upper respiratory infection both cats caught. The infection confined the brothers to the indoors for several weeks, until two weeks ago when they seemed to make a comeback that welcomed them back to the sunshine they loved.

Marvin took a turn for the worse on Wednesday, becoming “acutely weak.”

“An emergency exam revealed his quality of life was in sharp decline and his prognosis was very poor, so we made the very difficult decision to euthanize him humanely,” the zoo wrote in a Facebook post.

Mojo, who continues to struggle with less-advanced health concerns, remains on exhibit in the cheetah yard despite missing his lilfelong buddy.

“Zoo veterinarians are closely monitoring him and providing medical care,” the zoo wrote. “Cheetahs live an average of 10-12 years under human care, and few survive more than eight years in the wild.”

The duo made their way to the Denver Zoo in 2012 from a wildlife conservation center in Ohio called The Wilds.

Marvin and Mojo could often be spotted perched high up in their outdoor habitat, soaking in the Colorado sunshine.

“Marvin will be sorely missed by Mojo, the staff and volunteers at Denver Zoo, and the countless visitors who have been enthralled by his magnificence,” the zoo wrote. “We encourage guests to visit the Zoo to sign or write a note to his keeper on a card posted by the cheetah yard.”

RevContent Feed

More in Colorado News