It is an exclave of the Great Eurasian Steppe, found in modern-day Austria, Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia and easternmost parts of Croatia.
[6] The characteristic landscape is composed of treeless plains, saline steppes and salt lakes, and includes scattered sand dunes, low, wet forests and freshwater marshes along the floodplains of the ancient rivers.
[7][8] Apart from the Čenkovská forest-steppe, other notable steppe and forest-steppe biomes in Slovakia are located mostly around the Danubian and East Slovak plains and the southern ranges of the Pramatra system.
Two of the biomes are Devínska Kobyla and the Slovak Karst (connects to Aggtelek in Hungary).
[9][10][11] The part of the Pannonian steppe in Austria is present in Burgenland mainly around Lake Neusiedl.