This paper presents an overview of the Middle-Upper Paleolithic transition in Italy in light of recent research on the Uluzzian technocomplex and on the paleoecological context of the transition. Drawing on the realization that human niche construction can be documented in the pre-agricultural archaeological record, niche construction theory is used as a conceptual framework to tie together facets of the behavioral, biological, and ecological dimensions of the transition interval into formal models of their interaction over time and in diverse contexts. Ultimately, this effort shows how foragers of the transitional interval in the Italian peninsula were active agents in shaping their evolutionary history, with consequences of some adaptive systems being felt only much later and directing the forces responsible for the ultimate disappearance of the Mousterian and Uluzzian technocomplexes in favor of the proto-Aurignacian industry, the exact nature of which clearly appears to vary on a regional level. This paper builds on recent archaeological research that has used niche construction theory (NCT) to derive novel insights about prehistoric human adaptations and ecological legacies. It begins by presenting a discussion of one of the central question in anthropological archaeology-that of the disappearance of Neanderthals and Middle Paleolithic industries during the Middle-Upper Paleolithic transition to lay the groundwork on the potential interpretive benefits a niche construction perspective can bring to archaeological research focused on transitional intervals in