“…These types of long‐distance dispersal events highlight the potential for colonization of new habitats by house sparrows, which may be an important and hitherto overlooked part of this species success as a global colonizer and invasive species (Anderson, 2006 ; Hanson et al., 2020 ). Future studies may utilize these observations to investigate if individual phenotypic differences in, for example, morphology (Skjelseth et al., 2007 ), physiology (Nafstad et al., 2023 ; Pepke et al., 2022 ), or life‐history characteristics (Pärn et al., 2009 ; Saatoglu et al., 2024 ) underlie longer‐than‐expected dispersal distances (Tufto et al., 2005 ) in a species with very low flight efficiency (Claramunt, 2021 ). If dispersing individuals can successfully recruit into a breeding population, then they can offer a valuable genetic contribution to small, isolated, and often inbred populations (Dickel et al., 2021 ), such as these house sparrow populations habituating to island life on the northern Norwegian coast (Niskanen et al., 2020 ; Ranke et al., 2020 ).…”