Do women have spermatogonia in their bodies?

Normally, under normal circumstances, there are no spermatogonia in a woman’s body.
The source of spermatogonia is the spermatogenic epithelium within the seminiferous tubules in the male testes, which is produced by several mitotic divisions of primitive germ cells.
Spermatogonia continue to develop in the testes. It first undergoes replication and becomes a primary spermatogonia. The primary spermatocyte undergoes the first meiotic division to form the secondary spermatocyte, which is immediately followed by a second meiotic division to form the spermatocyte, which then undergoes a series of reactions to eventually metamorphose into the spermatozoon.
The development and maturation of male germ cells requires not only the testes, the male reproductive organ, as the structural foundation, but also various androgenic hormones to initiate and maintain the process of spermatogenesis. Women, on the other hand, not only do not have a structural foundation, but also have far less androgen levels, and therefore do not produce spermatogonia.