Newcastle University scientists asked people to pick up marbles and fishing weights and transfer them from one container to another.
The objects, which were sometimes submerged in water, were picked up with normal hands and with hands that had been held in warm water for half an hour to make them wrinkly.
Wrinkled fingers were quicker at picking up wet objects but offered no advantage for moving dry ones, the Royal Society journal Biology Letters reports.
Mr Smulders added that toes wrinkling in the bath could have evolved from a need to walk or run on slippery ground. He plans to carry out further research to see if other animals share the trait.
Wrinkles form when blood vessels under constrict, shrinking the fingertips and pulling in the skin.
- DAILY MAIL