The emergence and wide-spread circulation of mosquito-transmitted viral diseases, such as dengue, Zika and Chikungunya, is a global public health concern. In the absence of effective vaccines, current control measures are mostly targeted against the mosquito vector and have so far only shown limited success. The reliance on mosquitoes for transmission also imposes strong ecological constraints that can introduce significant spatial and temporal variations in disease incidence. However, the way that epidemiological and ecological factors interact and determine population-level disease dynamics is only partially understood. Here we fit a spatially-explicit individual based model defined within a Bayesian framework to Zika incidence data from Feira de Santana, allowing us to more precisely quantify the relationships between socioecological factors and arboviral outbreaks. Our results further demonstrated that the virus was likely introduced into multiple spatially segregated locations at the start of the outbreak, highlighting the benefits that spatio-temporal incidence data would bring in making modelling approaches more realistic for public health planning.where t is the individual's age in days, L is the location parameter of where infant and adult mortality coincide, {a H , b H } and {c H , d H } are the shape and scale parameters of infant and adult human mortality, respectively, and {c V , d V } are the shape and scale parameters of adult mosquito mortality, respectively.An arbovirus was introduced into the system by allowing every human individual to be either susceptible (S H ), exposed (E H ), infectious (I H ), or have recovered from (R H ) the disease. Similarly, individual mosquitoes were either susceptible (S V ), exposed (E V ) or infectious (I V ) with the virus. Mosquitoes bit at a constant rate β and infectious mosquitoes transmitted the virus with probability p H . Infected humans became infectious after 1/ H days and recovered after 1/γ days. Mosquitoes were then infected with probability p V given a bite on an infectious human, and became infectious after 1/ V days. To account for the introduction of the disease into the system, humans were also infected at an external infection rate, ι.We modelled the influence of temperature, humidity and rainfall on these transmission parameters similarly to Lourenço et al. (2017).