According to Beer Lambert's law, the intensity of light passing through a homogeneous medium diminishes at a rate proportional to the incident intensity; i.e.
$$ \frac{dI(s)}{ds} = -I(s)\sigma\, , $$
where $s$ is the parameter for the length of path taken by the light, and $\sigma$ is the volume extinction coefficient. Now assuming that the extinction happens purely from scattering, furthermore, assume that only single scattering events take place. The usual method to determining $\sigma$ is to sum the differential scattering cross sections $d\sigma$,
$$ \sigma = \int d\sigma = \oint\frac{d\sigma}{d\Omega}\, d\Omega = \int_0^{2\pi}\, d\phi\, \int_0^\pi \sin\theta\, d\theta \frac{d\sigma}{d\Omega}(\phi,\theta)\, , $$
where the last equality was taken from wiki (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross_section_(physics)).
My question is, assuming that the incident light is coming in from an angle of $\theta=\pi$, why do we include $\theta=0$ in the integral? Isn't it the case that any light that scatters into the $\theta=0$ angle contributes to the intensity $I(s)$? Instead, shouldn't scattering cross section the equation be the one shown below?
$$ \sigma = \int^{2\pi}_0d\phi\, \lim_{\Theta\rightarrow 0} \int_\Theta^\pi\sin\theta\, \frac{d\sigma}{d\Omega}(\phi, \theta) $$