The Prince visited the scene where the environmental rangers were gathering evidence in the hope of eventually catching the killers.
During the summer, Harry spent time with the team there as part of a private visit to learn about the work being done to protect endangered animals.
Talking to them next to the dead animal, he said: "This belongs to South Africa and it's been stolen by other people. But these people will be caught."
His trip to the national park and visit to the Southern Africa Wildlife school was to highlight the bravery of the rangers taking on poachers on a daily basis.
In a speech, he said: "In recent years Kruger has also become a major killing field.
"The numbers of rhinos poached in South Africa has grown by nearly 500% in just five years, with most of these occurring in Kruger.
"Already this year 1,500 rhinos have been killed in this country.
"That is four every day.
"If current poaching rates continue there will be no wild African elephants or rhinos left by the time children born this year - like my niece, Charlotte - turn 25."
To reinforce his message he also released his own private photos and videos to raise awareness of the plight of at risk species.
Posted on the Kensington Palace Instagram account, they were taken on Prince Harry's phone either by him or by people he was working with.
In one he is holding oxygen tubes going into a rhino as it is de-horned, while another shows him assisting in a facial reconstruction of a rhino that has been attacked and left for dead.
In one poignant photo, the Prince is lying with his arms extended and his head down over a sedated elephant.
Writing about the photo he said, "After a very long day in Kruger National Park, with five rhinos sent to new homes and three elephants freed from their collars - like this sedated female - I decided to take a moment.
"I know how lucky I am to have these experiences, but hearing stories from people on the ground about how bad the situation really is, upset and frustrated me."
"How can it be that 30,000 elephants were slaughtered last year alone?
"None of them had names, so do we not care? And for what? Their tusks?
"Seeing huge carcasses of rhinos and elephants scattered across Africa, with their horns and tusks missing is a pointless waste of beauty."
The number of incidents in South Africa has dramatically increased in the past five years.
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