Valhala,
your post is quite valid except for the fact that very few places on the Island have more that a few cubic feet of freezer space and many have no generator to support long storage with the power outages and are not capable of stocking up for the 5 months of off season.
Comparing how anything works in third world Honduras to what works in the US just goes to show your lack of infornation on the way things actually do work in the area
You obviously have no knowledge of fish stores and restaurant "stock" on the island. Will it help Honduran fisheries as a whole? Probably not a lot when there are divers regularly bent diving for them who are easilly replaced and with Honduras being a main supporter of Red lobster and other north American companies selling Lobsters BUT it can certainly help the area directly around the island
Your post is somewhat what would be expected comming from someone in an area full of law enforcement and taxes paying for such, My post is reality where people must do a lot on their own. Sure, taxes are low in Honduras which means we have very little for enforcement of any kind for any crimes, let alone poaching. Face it, if no one buys them then the market goes away, you cannot deny that but if you want to visit and eat illegaly harvested lobster then have at it, you may want some conch chowder that is probably illegal as well as try some iguana with a side of Island deer. Afterall, it has a wonderful flavor, sort of a cross between Bald eagle and sea turtle.
Sure there are some that stock up when lobster is in season and if its a place that has the facilities to do so then lets us in on it but also remember, when eating those 2 and three lobster tail meals that the tails are required to be 5.5 inches or more anf the shells dont really shrink when cooked