A government statement yesterday said a crackdown on illegal hunting since Cecil's killing had led to the arrest of safari organiser Headman Sibanda.
Sibanda's client was an American called Jan Casmir Sieski from Pennsylvania who travelled to the southern African country in April, the statement said, adding that the hunt took place on Sibanda's Railway Farm 31.
"Headman Sibanda's case is in connection with a lion that was killed by the other American in April," Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Management Authority spokeswoman Caroline Washaya-Moyo said.
The hunting of lions, leopards and elephants in the area around the reserve in western Zimbabwe has been suspended, as has hunting with bows and arrows -- the method used by Cecil's killer Walter Palmer -- barring special permission from the head of Zimparks.
The restrictions are expected to eat into the country's lucrative trophy hunting business.
The government said Sunday it was "very much aware of the final implications" for the safari industry and wildlife producers as well as those tasked with implementing the measures and appealed for donations for a special Zimparks conservation fund.
The lion is not a biological relation to Cecil, though their bond was one close to brotherhood.
The Zimbabwe Conservation Task Force, the environmentalist group that broke the news of Cecil's killing, caused consternation among animal lovers worldwide Saturday by announcing on Facebook that Jericho -- who has been looking after Cecil's cubs -- had also been killed.
But Zimparks put paid to the rumour on Sunday, declaring "the lion known as Jericho is still alive and being monitored by Brent Stapelias of the Lion Research Project".
"Jericho is alive and well," said Prof David Macdonald of Oxford University's Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, which had been tracking Cecil and Jericho by satellite.
"Last night we were surprised to see rumours of the death of a second lion, Jericho, circulating in the media - we had no evidence for this," he said.
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