“…This is, however, later followed by a dramatic wave of attrition observed around the time of cyst breakdown and primordial follicle formation (Findlay, Hutt, Hickey, & Anderson, 2015), the regulation of which is the subject of this review. While the field lacks a firm understanding of these many points of regulation, it is known that germ cell numbers peak at around 6 million in the human fetus (Baker, 1963; Silber, 2015), with a decline to 1–2 million in a newborn (Baker, 1963; Ford, Beckett, Roman, McLaughlin, & Sutherland, 2020; Silber, 2015) and further reduction to 400,000–500,000 around puberty (Pelosi, Forabosco, & Schlessinger, 2015; Silber, 2015). This loss is well‐documented and physiologically normal in many species, with mice also experiencing a similar peak in germ cell numbers during late gestation, reaching about 15,000 oogonia, with a decline by more than half in the following week of development (Ford et al, 2020; Grive & Freiman, 2015; Jones & Pepling, 2013; Morita et al, 2001; Myers et al, 2014; Pepling & Spradling, 2001).…”