Men.com — the gay adult studio behind such productions as “Erectile Entanglement,” “Flesh Peddler,” “The Whoremonger” and “My Therapist is a Pervert” — has drawn ire from the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) for a recent scene showing an alligator.

In the scene, entitled “The Everglades,” performers Kaleb Stryker and Diego Sans have sex in the Florida Everglades, a tropical wetlands in the southern part of the state consisting of swamps, marshes and mangrove trees. Director Marc MacNamara filmed the scene on location on May 17.

During their scene, an alligator floats in the water near their pontoon and then stalks through the mud in the background as Sans tops Stryker. Neither man tries to engage the alligator because that would be creepy.

But in a statement given to Gay Star News, PETA Director Elisa Allen disapproved of the alligator being included in the scene:

“No matter what humans are getting up to on set, wild animals should be left to their own private lives, never used as props or decorations. They deserve to be spared the confusion, stress, confinement, and exposure to bright lights and loud noises that are inevitable on a film set – and the distress caused by shifting them from place to place – which is why PETA urges all film directors to work only with willing, human actors.”

While Men.com hasn’t commented on PETA’s statement yet, it’s probably loving the free publicity. After all, the studio usually gets headlines for making explicit parodies of pop-culture hits including The Justice League and Pokemon Go.

Related: Men.com just unveiled its new trans male performer, but why aren’t there more in gay adult videos?

PETA also probably digs the free publicity too as it’s predominantly known for media stunts like its ad comparing meat eaters to Jeffrey Dahmer, featuring partially naked folks in their annual “sexiest vegan” competition and having a gay couple make-out in public to prove that “vegetarians make better lovers.”

Considering PETA’s love of using sex for attention, perhaps they should be collaborating with Men.com instead of complaining about them. They could call the scene “Tofu Taboo,” “Soy Boys” or “Cruelty-Free Furries.”